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FREE ESSAY ON RECONSTRUCTION IN SOUTH

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From Slavery to Freedom: The Struggle of Reconstruction
An overview of the challenges facing freed slaves during the Reconstruction period. -- 857 words; APA

The Struggles Toward the American Reconstruction
A review of the period known as "Reconstruction" following the American Civil War. -- 1,250 words; MLA

Reconstruction and Andrew Johnson
A look at Andrew Johnson's reconstruction plan following the United States Civil War. -- 1,125 words;

The Reconstruction Era
This paper discusses the difficulties and diverse processes used to direct the slow and confusing political evolution of the South during the Reconstruction era after the end of the Civil War. -- 2,835 words; APA

Reconstruction
The aftermath of the Civil War in the south. -- 2,400 words;

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RECONSTRUCTION IN SOUTH

While reading Eric Foner's book I came to appreciate the difficulties the freed black
slaves encountered for example, how the previous slave owning class continued to
manipulate the freed slaves. Also, I was impressed at the great sacrifice they made when
attempting to become educated. Last of all I was surprised at the severity of persecution
and abuse of blacks that was still considered legal after they were freed. When the label
of slave was removed from the black American, it was meant to clarify that they were
human beings.
Human beings eligible to participate in America's society and culture. However, racism
denied them the privileges of the American citizen. Although they were no longer slaves,
they were still considered to be savages, unintelligent, and the lowest class of person
in the United States.
Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863. The Proclamation set the
American slave population free. However, it did not indicate how new Black citizens would
be incorporated into the free society. Emancipation would redefine how blacks saw
themselves and their aspirations, and it would redefine the labor system. Blacks believed
that they could equally share in prosperity and progress with whites. Blacks desperately
wanted to move up in social standing and become educated. They desired literacy. They
wanted to plant their own crops and have the chance to sell them for profit. They wanted
to work hard for the chance of a better life for their children. 
The commitment to white supremacy in the South began with the planter's intention of
keeping the institution of slavery. Whites perceived
emancipation as uncompensated liquidation of the nation's largest concentration of
private property and a redefinition of the place of blacks in American society(p.2).
Blacks saw emancipation as their opportunity to become involved with society without the
burden of being owned by someone. The labor system of free labor versus slavery contained
a transition that few in the south were willing to accommodate. Planters went from owning
blacks as property, to negotiating a wage in exchange for their labor. Although blacks
were declared free, some were required to sign a yearly contract that promised service to
one planter. If a free black chose not to sign the contract, he was intimidated into
signing. The underlying message was clear, sign or have you and your family live in
constant fear of abuse. With these contracts, planters tightened authority and presided
over all details of the lives of blacks. Blacks were closely supervised to the point that
the pace of work they desired was routinely challenged. The freedmen were persuaded to
sign the contract in order to preserve the labor system that had been prevalent in the
South. By voluntarily signing and adhering to contracts, both planters and freedmen would
develop the habits of a free labor economy and come to understand their fundamental
harmony of interests(p.75). The Southern white planters would determine these interests.
The contracts themselves bound the freedmen into a continued extorted form of slavery. At
harvest time, most planters did not pay the blacks their earned wages. Blacks would labor
the entire season only to be left with the feeling of desperation that was identical to
slavery. Some contracts stipulated that if a crop failed the blacks would receive nothing
and fines could be charged against their wages if the planter determined the work was
unsatisfactory. Some contracts allowed the planter to penalize full wages accrued if the
freedmen left work. On some plantations physical brutality and corporal punishment
continued as if slavery never ended. The overall goal for equal treatment for the
freedmen was contradicted as idle white men were never required to sign a labor contract
(p.76). The South wanted the amenities that the North had, as long as the primary source
of labor went undisturbed. Redefining the black labor force could endanger the entire
economic system subscribed by the South. The prejudice and commitment to the continuation
of a plantation slave labor system limited overall progress in the South. 
Southern planters would not accept that blacks were free Americans and could leave the
area. Blacks however saw things differently. At the initial prospect of being free, they
saw themselves as a citizen of the U.S. with the same rights as whites. They wanted to
participate in all forms of activity they had been denied because of their color. They
wanted to be involved in both business and politics. They genuinely believed in the laws
of the United States that indicated they were freedmen and were no longer restricted
because of color. They wanted the same opportunities as the whites, desired the same for
their children, and coveted the life of the whites that now nothing prevented them from
earning. They wanted the chance to work for themselves. They wanted to own their own
piece of property, grow a crop, and harvest for themselves. I can only imagine the
heartache and internal suffering felt when they realized that even though they had been
declared free, limitations and barriers were still placed upon them. 
Quickly, blacks recognized that education was the key to their social mobility. Education
began to take precedent in the freed black community. Many black soldiers began their
quest for literacy while serving in the Union army. Before the civil war, most southern
states prohibited the instruction of slaves(p.43). After the war, it seemed as if blacks
were willing to do anything to learn. This applied to both the young and old. They set up
their own schools, holding classes anywhere they could, in abandoned warehouses, billiard
rooms, or churches (p.43). Children taught parents and parents taught their children.
Over lunch breaks laborers would challenge each other, all excited to understand and
learn. The responsibility of educating blacks was realized within their own community.
Throughout the South, blacks in 1865 and 1866 raised money to purchase land, build
schoolhouses, and pay teachers' salaries. Some communities voluntarily taxed themselves;
in others black schools charged tuition, while allowing a number of the poorest families
to enroll their children free of charge(p.43). Not only did blacks raise the money to
fund the schoolhouse; they also donated their labor to erect the building. They were
extremely committed to advancement and redefining themselves. 
Southern states as a whole began to encourage literacy and education. The question arose
as to where the blacks would fit in. Some proposed that the state provide funds for the
education of blacks. Delaware, Kentucky, and Maryland Democrats initially made no
provision at all for black education, then ordered that these schools that these schools
be financed by taxes on black parents (183). Given their racist attitudes not many were
supportive of spending white tax dollars on black schools. Proposed next was the
integration of blacks into existing white schools. Foner indicates that integration was
defended at times so white students could be taught caste and hate and black students
could be taught their inferiority (p.227). 
Reluctant of integration, some whites avoid an academic institution altogether. If black
students were going to be integrated into a white classroom, most whites refused to stay.
At the University of South Carolina in 1873, the first black student in the history of
the school enrolled in their college of medicine. Soon after, most white students and
some white faculty relocated. The governor of North Carolina in 1865 persuaded the state
legislature to abolish the state school system. The governor feared that if white
children were educated at public expense, it would be required to educate blacks as well.
Most blacks who desired a college education had to go to the north. 
Hideous crimes committed by both Southern and Northern whites against blacks mostly went
unpunished. In one Democratic Alabama county in 1870, a black woman was brutally beaten
by a group of whites was ordered to raise $16.45 for court costs before her complaint was
heard. After she did so, the judge released the offenders and instructed the injured
woman to drop the matter or face a jail term (p.182). At the first inclination of black
progress, violence raised its ugly head. The emergence of a hate groups and mobs policed
elections and occasions where blacks as a race could challenged the racist institutions
of the past. The Ku Klux Klan emerges as a military force serving the interests of the
Democratic party, the planter class, and all those who desired the restoration of white
supremacy(p.184). The K.K.K. wanted full control of the blacks as a labor force. The
primary objective of the K.K.K. was to weaken Reconstruction and reinstate racial
inferiority in every condition of Southern life. Murders and lynchings were a standard
form of coercion to terrorize blacks back into submission. Many blacks lost their lives
if a politician was sympathetic to the black cause or if the threat of widespread black
vote for a certain candidate could determine the outcome of an election. Beatings,
whippings, and raids on black homes continued throughout the South. Educated blacks and
black leaders were persecuted and killed in order to persuade other blacks to refrain
from objecting to longstanding policies. 
Blacks were tortured both mentally and physically in their struggle for freedom. Racism
prevented Reconstruction's incorporation of the free black into white American society.
The disenfranchisement of the black citizen pervaded America's culture and politics.
Racism allowed the south to remain a one-party system ruled by a regressive privileged
few who used violence and deception to repress internal dissension. The black American
desired and deserved independence from racial bigotry, caste, and segregation. 
Bibliography
Eric Foner - Reconstruction

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