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Andrew Johnson Dbq

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A man’s vote gives way for elected officials to be president, but a man’s bullet could force even a stubborn and illiterate person like Andrew Johnson to take control of the reins of presidency.
With the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, the presidency fell upon an southerner named Andrew Johnson. Andrew Johnson was a poor man with little education. Although he was stubborn and a tailor from Tennessee, he was a man who held strong political power and many different high offices. Initially inspired by the Jacksonian democracy, Andrew Johnson was elected into the U.S Senate in 1857 to represent the state of Tennessee. While serving in the Senate, Johnson became a supporter of the Homestead Bill, which was opposed by most Southern Democrats …show more content…

In state constitutional conventions, delegates elected by all whites who had received amnesty would have to amend their constitutions to abolish slavery, ratify the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, repudiate all debts contracted by the Confederate governments, and nullify the secession ordinances. Having done that, Southerners could organize elections to establish regular civil governments under the supervision of President Johnson’s governors. Yet, to Johnson, the abolition of slavery itself seemed a radical step, one that overturned the social and economic system of generations. (Les Benedict, 6) Similar to Lincoln’s views about African Americans being a secondary interest compared to that of the white southerners, Johnson believed that slaves should not have any rights as compared to the white Americans. (Conlin, 411) He did not favor voting for black people and so in his view the Constitution would not allow making black suffrage one of the federal mandates. He, in effect, made his personal beliefs “coterminous with the constitutional authority; if he approved of a measure it was constitutional and if he did not approve of a measure it was unconstitutional.” (Gordon-Reed, 102) After all, though he was a man of the Union, his roots still resided in the South. He reportedly declared as that “this is a country for white men, and as …show more content…

States like Mississippi and Alabama rejected the Thirteenth Amendment, which essentially abolished slavery, while people in South Carolina stated that “blacks should be kept as near to the condition of slavery as possible, and as from the condition of the white man as is practicable. In fact, some states even made it illegal for the African Americans to live in towns and cities, own land and property, and prohibit the right to own firearms. (Conlin, 412) Eventually, this led to opposition from the radical republicans who thought that the president had no mandate to formulate and implement such a policy considering his powers were reduced by the same group. They didn’t share the same views as the president because they felt that the freedmen should be protected and the power of the Republican Party should be sustained in the South. Therefore, when the U.S. Congress convened in December 1865, they moved vigorously to change Johnson's program. They gained the support of

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