North or South: Who Killed Reconstruction?
…the slave went free;
stood a brief moment in the sun; then moved back again toward slavery.
W.E.B.
Dubois
1876 was an exciting year for
America. It was the 100th anniversary of The Declaration of
Independence and America was on the move. Homesteaders and ranchers were
filling up the land west of the Mississippi River. Railroads were being built
at an astounding rate. It seemed the United States was creating enough
opportunity that all Americans and millions of immigrants could pursue their
hopes for happiness just as Thomas Jefferson had envisioned 100 years earlier.
So it is a
great irony of history that the election of 1876 officially crushed the
American dream for millions of black Americans. This election saw Rutherford B.
Hayes, the Republican candidate and eventual winner, square off against Samuel
J. Tilden, the Democratic nominee. Although Tilden won the popular vote by a
wide margin, election results in Florida, South Carolina, and Louisiana were so
close that a winner could not be determined. If these three states went for
Hayes, he would win the Electoral College vote and become President.
Talk of new
Civil War was in the air as the opponents in the disputed states submitted
separate sets of electoral ballots. An informal agreement, now called The
Compromise of 1877, avoided the crisis by granting Hayes the Presidency. In
return, Hayes promised to remove the last Federal soldiers from the South, almost
guaranteeing that all-white governments would rise to power. The dream of
Reconstruction was officially dead.
For a
while, however, it had seemed that the dream of Reconstruction might be
realize. The 13th Amendment ended slavery. The 14th
Amendment gave black Americans citizenship and civil rights. A Military
Reconstruction Act was passed to make sure African-Americans’ new rights were
protected. Black churches were founded. Public schools were built for black
children, and universities like Howard, Fisk, Morehouse, and Hampton were
founded for black students seeking higher education. Sixteen African-Americans
were elected to Congress and numerous others served at state and local levels.
Finally, the 15th Amendment was ratified making it illegal to deny someone
the right to vote based on race. Indeed, real progress was made.
However, in
the early 1870s, the tide shifted. Southern states began to elect governments
dedicated to whites-only rule. Between 1870 and 1876 all but three Southern
states turned back Reconstruction efforts. When Rutherford B. Hayes agreed to
remove federal soldiers, he was simply putting an end to an already dying
effort. But dying or dead, what had gone wrong? North or South: Who killed
Reconstruction?
The DBQ Project
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