ssahtech16c09naSW3_s.fm Page 558 Tuesday, July 31, 2007 9:39 AM

3

SECTION

Section

Step-by-Step Instruction

A Southern Viewpoint

“ It would be best for the peace, harmony, and

prosperity of the whole country that there should be an immediate restoration, an immediate bringing back of the states into their original practical relations.

Review and Preview Radical Republicans succeeded in passing three amendments in an effort to secure rights of freedmen. Students will now focus on the demise of Reconstruction efforts and the resulting hardships for African Americans in the South.



— Alexander H. Stephens, urging an end to federal control of southern states, 1866 �

Cartoon criticizing northern carpetbaggers in the South

The End of Reconstruction Section Focus Question What were the effects of Reconstruction? Before you begin the lesson for the day, write the Section Focus Question on the board. (Lesson focus: military rule in the South; Democrats regaining power in southern states; African Americans losing rights they had gained during Reconstruction; many freedmen left poor and landless; the South’s economy beginning to recover)

L2

Have students recall the changes that took place in the South during Reconstruction. Use the Idea Wave strategy (TE, p. T24) to elicit responses and list them on the board. Tell students that they will learn that the South changed again after Reconstruction ended.

Set a Purpose ■

• Identify the signs that the South began to develop a stronger economy by the 1880s.

Reconstruction’s Conclusion

• Describe how African Americans in the South lost many newly gained rights.

Reading Skill

Key Terms and People poll tax literacy test grandfather clause

segregation Homer Plessy sharecropper

both North and South were calling for the withdrawal of federal troops and full amnesty for former Confederates. Starting with Virginia in 1869, opponents of Republicans began to take back the South, state by state. Slowly, they chipped away at the rights of African Americans. In some states, campaigns of terror by secret societies were a major factor in restoring their power. By 1874, Republicans had lost control of all but three southern states. By 1877, Democrats controlled those, too.

Form students into pairs or groups of four. Distribute the Reading Readiness Guide. Ask students to fill in the first two columns of the chart.

Use the Numbered Heads strategy (TE, p. T24) to call on students to share one piece of information they already know and one piece of information they want to know. The students will return to these worksheets later.

558 Chapter 16

Support for Radical Republicans declined as Americans began to forget the Civil War and focus on bettering their own lives. Scandals within President Grant’s administration played an important role. Grant made poor appointments to public offices, often appointing personal friends. Many of the appointees proved to be corrupt. Although Grant himself had no part in the corruption that took place, his reputation suffered. Grant won reelection in 1872, but many northerners lost faith in the Republicans and their policies.

Self-rule for the South Meanwhile, many people in

L2

Teaching Resources, Unit 5, Reading Readiness Guide, p. 81 ■

• Describe the sharecropping system and how it trapped many in a cycle of poverty.

Why It Matters The South experienced reforms during the Reconstruction era. However, many of the changes were quite temporary. When Reconstruction ended, African Americans were subjected to new hardships and injustices. It would take more than a century to overcome these injustices. Section Focus Question: What were the effects of Reconstruction?

Evaluate Proposals When you read a proposal, ask yourself: Is the proposal likely to work as a way of advancing its goal?

Prepare to Read Build Background Knowledge

Objectives • Explain why support for Reconstruction declined.

The Election of 1876 The end of Reconstruction was a direct result of the presidential election of 1876. Because of disputes over election returns, the choice of the President was 558 Chapter 16 Reconstruction and the New South

Differentiated Instruction L1 English Language Learners

L1 Less Proficient Readers

Gaining Comprehension Have students

read the text of The End of Reconstruction as they listen to the Student Edition on Audio CD. Create exit cards for the students to complete at the end of the CD. The cards will read “What I learned about

L1 Special Needs

_____” or “It made me feel _____.” Review their responses. Students can be given a copy of the CD to work independently at home or in the school Resource Center. SE on Audio CD, Chapter 16

Teach Reconstruction’s Conclusion p. 558

Instruction ■

L2

Vocabulary Builder Before teaching

this lesson, preteach the High-Use Words require and inferior, using the strategy on TE p. T21. Key Terms Have students complete the See It–Remember It chart.

PACIFIC OCEAN

AZ TERR.

CO

INDIAN TERR.

NM TERR.

30°N

110°W

L. Michigan

IA

E L.

rie

PA

OH IL

IN

MO

WV VA KY

CT



Ask: What event marked the end of Reconstruction? (the election of 1876) What do you think might have happened if Reconstruction continued for many more years? (Answers will vary, but should reflect prior knowledge of the changes made during Reconstruction.)

NJ DE MD

AL



Display the Voting Patterns During Reconstruction transparency. Discuss the changes that might have come when representation in Congress switched from mostly Republican in 1872 to mostly Democrat in 1876. (Possible answers: end of Reconstruction; fewer rights for African Americans; end to military rule in the South.)

ATLANTIC OCEAN

KEY Hayes, Republican Tilden, Democrat Disputed results

GA

LA

Gulf of Mexico

S

MA RI

SC

AR

FL

MEXICO

W

NC

TN MS

TX

MI

NY

80°W

120°W

KS

PERCENTAGE POPULAR VOTE

PERCENTAGE ELECTORAL VOTE

1% Minor 51%

48%

50.1%

49.9%

90°W

100°W

CA

UT TERR.

WI

VT NH

W 70°

NE

L. Ontario

L.

MN

WY TERR.

Ask students to explain how Republicans began to lose power. (Scandals during Republican President Grant’s term led northerners to lose faith in Republicans. People began calling for the end of military rule, which led to Democrats taking back control of southern states.)

W 60°

40°N

DAKOTA TERR.



E

ME

Superior L.

MT TERR. ID TERR.

NV

400

ron Hu

OR

0 km

0 miles 400 Albers Equal-Area Projection

WA TERR.

Read Reconstruction’s Conclusion with students using the Choral Reading technique (TE, p. T22).

N

CANADA

50°N



Color Transparencies, Voting Patterns During Reconstruction

Answers Section 3 The End of Reconstruction 559

Reading Skill Hayes proposed to end Reconstruction. The Democrats wanted to end Reconstruction and the Republicans wanted to win the presidency. northerners’ losing faith in Republicans because of government corruption; Democratic candidates taking back the South; the election of 1876 (a) the South (b) No; the map shows that people in the South primarily voted one way—Democratic—and people in the North and West primarily voted a different way—Republican. Chapter 16 559

ssahtech16c09naSW3_s.fm Page 560 Tuesday, July 31, 2007 9:39 AM

Independent Practice

African Americans Lose Rights

Have students begin filling in the study guide for this section.

With the end of Reconstruction, African Americans began to lose their remaining political and civil rights in the South. Southern whites used a variety of techniques to stop African Americans from voting. They passed laws that applied to whites and African Americans but were enforced mainly against African Americans. One such law imposed a poll tax—a personal tax to be paid before voting. This kept a few poor whites and many poor freedmen from voting. Another law required voters to pass a literacy test, or a test to see if a person can read and write. In this case, voters were required to read a section of the Constitution and explain it. However, a grandfather clause allowed illiterate white males to vote. The grandfather clause was a provision that allowed a voter to avoid a literacy test if his father or grandfather had been eligible to vote on January 1, 1867. Because no African American in the South could vote before 1868, nearly all were denied the right to vote. Southern states created a network of laws requiring segregation, or enforced separation of races. These so-called Jim Crow laws barred the mixing of races in almost every aspect of life. Blacks and whites were born in separate hospitals and buried in separate cemeteries. The laws decreed separate playgrounds, restaurants, and schools. They required African Americans to take back seats or separate cars on railroads and streetcars. When African Americans challenged the restrictions in court, they lost. State and local courts consistently ruled that Jim Crow laws were legal.

Monitor Progress

command

p. 560 L2

Farms Rented for Shares of Products, 1880 60

Monitor Progress As students fill in the Notetaking Study Guide, circulate to make sure individuals understand how African Americans lost rights they had gained during Reconstruction. Provide assistance as needed.

Answer Draw Conclusions They could not make

enough money to pay back their debt to landowners and buy their own land. 560 Chapter 16

South

40

West

30 20 10

go

n

ni a

as

or lif Ca

Te x

m ba

tic ec nn N

Co

a

0

Independent Practice Have students continue filling in the study guide for this section.

Northeast

50

hi re

Teaching Resources, Unit 5, Concept Lesson, p. 86; Concept Organizer, p. 6

Farming land they did not own, sharecroppers were locked into a cycle of debt, as shown by the illustration. Critical Thinking: Draw Conclusions Why was it hard for sharecroppers to escape the debt cycle?

la

To help students better understand the concept of segregation, which is important to the understanding of this section, use the Concept Lesson Segregation. Distribute copies of the concept organizer.

1. Planting the Crop Landowners give the sharecropper land, seed, and tools in exchange for a share in the crop. Sharecroppers buy goods and supplies from the landowner on credit.

A



Lead a discussion on how the lives of African Americans and whites in the South might have differed when segregation was law. (Answers will vary, but students should point out that whites probably had access to better education, jobs, and facilities.)

ut



INFOGRAPHIC

ps

Ask: What was the grandfather clause? (a provision that allowed a voter to skip a literacy test if his father or grandfather had been eligible to vote on January 1, 1867) Why was it passed? (to ensure that only white men could vote)

am



H

Read African Americans Lose Rights with students. Have students look for evidence that southern whites achieved their goal—keeping African Americans from voting.

ew



Farms Rented (tens of thousands)

Instruction

re

African Americans Lose Rights

Vocabulary Builder require (rih KWYR ) v. to order or

O

As students fill in the Notetaking Study Guide, circulate to make sure individuals understand how and why Reconstruction ended. Provide assistance as needed.

States

Source: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research

560

Differentiated Instruction L3 Advanced Readers

L3 Gifted and Talented

Comparing Explain that like the election for President in 1876, the election of 2000 resulted in the winner of the popular vote losing the election. Have students research this election, in which George W. Bush

defeated Al Gore. Point out that thirdparty candidate Ralph Nader also played a role in the results. Then ask students to identify the similarities and differences between the two elections.

ssahtech16c09naSW3_s.fm Page 561 Tuesday, July 31, 2007 9:39 AM

In 1896, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld segregation laws. Homer Plessy had been arrested for sitting in a coach marked “for whites only.” In the case of Plessy v. Ferguson, the Court ruled in favor of a Louisiana law requiring segregated railroad cars. The Court said a law could require “separate” facilities, so long as they were “equal.” This “separate but equal” rule was in effect until the 1950s. In fact, facilities for African Americans were rarely equal. For example, public schools for African Americans were almost always inferior to schools for whites.

A Cycle of Poverty p. 561

Instruction

Read A Cycle of Poverty with students. Have students look for causes and effects.



Have students look at the Sharecropping Cycle of Poverty feature and ask them to describe the cycle in their own words. (Students’ answers will vary, but should reflect an understanding of how sharecroppers got trapped in a cycle of debt.) Ask: Were African Americans in towns and cities struggling with poverty as well? Explain. (Yes, opportunities for skilled workers dwindled and many African Americans had to take any job they could find.)



Display the History Interactive transparency Sharecropping Cycle of Poverty. Ask students if they think there is a point where the cycle might be broken.

Vocabulary Builder

inferior (ihn FIR ee uhr) adj. of lower rank or status, or of poorer quality

What methods did southern states use to deprive African Americans of their rights?

A Cycle of Poverty

At emancipation, many freedmen owned little more than the clothes they wore. Poverty forced many African Americans, as well as poor whites, to become sharecroppers. A sharecropper is a laborer who works the land for the farmer who owns it, in exchange for a share of the value of the crop. The landlord supplied living quarters, tools, seed, and food on credit. At harvest time, the landlord sold the crop and tallied up how much went to the sharecroppers. Often, especially in years of low crop prices or bad harvests, the sharecroppers’ share was not enough to cover what they owed the landlord for rent and supplies. As a result, most sharecroppers became locked into a cycle of debt. 2. Harvesting the Crop and Settling Accounts The sharecropper gives the landowner his crop. Landowner sells it and gives the tenant his share, minus the amount owed at the company store.

L2



Color Transparencies, Explore the Sharecropping Cycle Visit: PHSchool.com Web Code: myp-5127

Independent Practice Have students continue filling in the study guide for this section. Interactive Reading and Notetaking Study Guide, Chapter 16, Section 3 (Adapted Version also available.)

Monitor Progress As students fill in the Notetaking Study Guide, circulate to make sure individuals understand why many African Americans struggled with poverty. Provide assistance as needed.

3. Cycle of Debt After a year of hard work, the sharecroppers often owed more than they had earned and had no choice but to offer the landlord a greater percentage of next year’s crop.

Section 3 The End of Reconstruction 561

History Background Harlan’s Predictions Supreme Court Justice John Harlan was the only voice of dissent in the Plessy v. Ferguson case. He showed incredible foresight in his opinion when he wrote: “Our Constitution is colorblind, and neither knows nor tolerates classes among citizens. In respect of civil rights, all citizens are equal before the law . . . In my opinion, the judgment this day rendered will, in time, prove to be quite as

pernicious as the decision made by this tribunal in the Dred Scott case . . . The present decision, . . . , will not only stimulate aggressions, . . . , upon the admitted rights of colored citizens, but will encourage the belief that it is possible, by means of state [laws], to defeat the [good] purposes which the people of the United States had in view when they adopted the recent amendments of the Constitution.”

Answer They used poll taxes and literacy tests to prevent African Americans from voting, and passed Jim Crow laws that prevented African Americans from using facilities that whites used. Chapter 16 Section 3 561

ssahtech16c09naSW3_s.fm Page 562 Tuesday, July 31, 2007 9:39 AM

1963 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., speaks to Americans in Washington, D.C.

Industrial Growth p. 562

Instruction

L2



Read Industrial Growth with students. As students read, circulate and make sure individuals can answer the Checkpoint question.



Ask: What part of the South’s economy began to recover first during Reconstruction? (agriculture)



Ask: How did the South use its resources to develop manufacturing? Give an example. (It built mills and factories to develop its resources. For example, furniture factories were built to turn the South’s lumber into furniture; textile factories used the region’s cotton; factories used the South’s iron and oil.)

Independent Practice

Fighting for Civil Rights 1896 In Plessy v. Ferguson, the Supreme Court upheld segregation laws in the South. These restrictions continued for more than 50 years. 1950s–1960s Some Americans launched a campaign to bring equal rights to African Americans. This civil rights movement used marches, petitions, and other public actions to end discrimination in education, use of public facilities, and voting.

Civil Rights Today Did the civil rights movement win equal rights for all Americans? Not everyone agrees. Go online to find out more about recent developments in civil rights. For: Civil rights in the news Visit: PHSchool.com Web Code: myc-5123

Have students complete the study guide for this section. Interactive Reading and Notetaking Study Guide, Chapter 16, Section 3 (Adapted Version also available.)

Opportunities dwindled for African Americans in southern towns and cities, too. African American artisans who had been able to find skilled jobs during Reconstruction increasingly found such jobs closed to them. Those with some education could become schoolteachers, lawyers, or preachers in the African American community. But most urban African Americans had to take whatever menial job they could find.

Monitor Progress ■





Check Notetaking Study Guide entries for student understanding of how the South developed its industries during and after Reconstruction.

How did many freedmen and whites become locked in a cycle of poverty?

Tell students to fill in the last column of the Reading Readiness Guide. Ask them to consider whether what they learned was what they had expected to learn.

Industrial Growth

It would be a long process, but during Reconstruction the South’s economy began to recover. By the 1880s, new industries appeared. Southerners hailed a “New South,” based on industrial growth. The first element of the South’s economy to begin recovery was agriculture. Cotton production, which had lagged during the war, quickly revived. By 1875, it was setting new records. Planters put more land into tobacco production, and output grew. Southern investors started or expanded industries to turn raw materials into finished products. The textile industry came to play an important role in the southern economy.

Have students go back to their Word Knowledge Rating Form. Rerate their word knowledge and complete the last column with a definition or example. Teaching Resources, Unit 5, Reading Readiness Guide, p. 81; Word Knowledge Rating Form, p. 78

562 Chapter 16 Reconstruction and the New South

Differentiated Instruction L3 Advanced Readers

Answer Sharecroppers bought farming supplies from landowners on credit and shared the profits from crops. They often did not make enough money to pay back the debt, so they had to keep working for the landowners to repay them. 562 Chapter 16

L3 Gifted and Talented

Predicting Have students work in pairs. Have each select a major event from this chapter and assume that either it had not occurred or that it had a different outcome. (For example, what if Samuel Tilden had

been elected President rather than Rutherford B. Hayes?) Have each pair give a brief oral presentation in which they speculate how subsequent events in American history might have been different.

ssahtech16c09naSW3_s.fm Page 563 Tuesday, July 31, 2007 9:39 AM

The South had natural resources in abundance, but it had done little to develop them in the past. Atlanta newspaper editor Henry Grady described the funeral of a man from Georgia as follows: They buried him in the heart of a pine forest, and yet the “pine coffin was imported from Cincinnati. They buried him within touch of an iron mine, and yet the nails in his coffin and the iron in the shovel that dug his grave were imported from Pittsburgh.

Assess and Reteach To further explore the topics in this chapter, complete the activity in the Historian’s Apprentice Activity Pack to answer this essential question:

Was Reconstruction a success or a failure?



—Henry Grady to the Bay State Club of Boston, 1889

The South began to develop its own resources. New mills and factories grew up to use the South’s iron, timber, and oil. Lumber mills and furniture factories processed yellow pine and hardwoods from southern forests. Southern leaders took great pride in the region’s progress. They spoke of a “New South” that was no longer dependent on “King Cotton.” An industrial age was underway, although the North was still far more industrialized.

Factory in the “New South”

Reading Skill

2. (a) Recall What is segregation? (b) Analyze Cause and Effect How did Plessy v. Ferguson make the fight against segregation more difficult?

1. (a) Sharecroppers were farmers who

rented land and paid a share of each year’s crop as rent; they did not own the land they worked. (b) Sharecroppers often owed landlords more than they made at the end of a year.

2. (a) enforced separation of races (b) It ruled in favor of segregation as

long as facilities were equal.

L3

Have students complete the History Interactive activity online. Provide students with the Web Code below.

5. Because of laws in the South requiring segregation, African Americans and whites _____.

For: Help in starting the History Interactive activity Visit: PHSchool.com Web Code: myp-5127

Writing

6. Rewrite the following passage to correct the errors. Passage: The 1876 presidential election decided by a special commission. Key Terms Samuel J. Tilden a democrat won Complete each of the following senthe Popular vote over republican tences so that the second part clearly Rutherford B. Hayes. However, shows your understanding of the their were 20 disputed electorial key term. votes. A special commission 4. African Americans and whites had made an agreement with the to pay a poll tax before _____. democrats.

3 Check Your Progress

L1

Extend

Section 3 The End of Reconstruction 563

Section

To further assess student understanding, use the Progress Monitoring Transparency.

Interactive Reading and Notetaking Study Guide, Chapter 16, Section 3 (Adapted Version also available.)

For: Self-test with instant help Visit: PHSchool.com Web Code: mya-5123

3. Evaluate Proposals In Plessy v. Ferguson, the Supreme Court 1. (a) Identify Who were shareproposed the idea of “separate croppers? How did they differ but equal” facilities. Do you from landowners? think this idea meets the goal of (b) Draw Conclusions Why did ensuring equal rights? so many sharecroppers live in poverty?

Teaching Resources, Section Quiz, p. 89

If students need more instruction, have them read this section in the Interactive Reading and Notetaking Study Guide and complete the accompanying question.

in 1877, its record showed many successes and some failures. Most importantly, all African Americans were finally citizens. Laws passed during Reconstruction, such as the Fourteenth Amendment, became the basis of the civil rights movement that took place almost 100 years later.

Comprehension and Critical Thinking

Have students complete Check Your Progress. Administer the Section Quiz.

Reteach

Looking Back and Ahead When Reconstruction ended

Check Your Progress

L2

Progress Monitoring Transparencies, Chapter 16, Section 3

What was the “New South” that was emerging by 1900?

Section 3

Assess Progress

Progress Monitoring Online Students may check their comprehension of this section by completing the Progress Monitoring Online graphic organizer and self-quiz.

3. The Court reasoned that laws calling for

separate facilities for whites and blacks were acceptable as long as facilities were equal. Students will probably disagree with the Court’s proposition because the facilities for blacks were never equal to those for whites.

4. they could vote. 5. had to use separate facilities such as

restaurants and playgrounds.

6. Check for grammar and organization of

content.

Answer The New South began to develop its own resources, setting up mills and factories to turn its resources into useful goods. Chapter 16 Section 3 563