preview

How Did The South Punish The North After Civil War

Decent Essays

Following the Civil War, tensions were high in the United States. The North sought to make the South pay for their actions, freed slaves wanted autonomy, and the South wanted to put blacks back into their system of slavery. Everyone had their own differing ideas of freedom, and these ideas caused clashes and struggles. The three competing notions of freedom in the nineteenth century were the North's desires to end slavery and punish the South, freed slaves pushing for independence and true freedom, and the South’s goal to recreate life as it was before the Civil War, with the South being the most successful. The North was successful in the Civil War, and with that, they had almost all control over the South’s future at the time. The new goal was to punish the South, to make them pay for the war and try to make them become more like the North. When Andrew Johnson became …show more content…

If the former Confederate states were run by Republicans, it was more likely they could push them to assist the North economically. They could use them to more easily supply resources like cotton or timber, without there being much struggle or fight from the South. Enforcing laws, preventing future conflicts, and ending slavery would also be significantly easier with Republicans leading the governments in the southern states. For Radical Republicans, however, they were less concerned with economics and more concerned with punishment and equality. One example of this is Thaddeus Stevens, a Radical Republican who wanted “to confiscate the land of disloyal planters and divide it among former slaves and northern migrants to the South” (Foner, 565). The idea of Radical Reconstruction also came about through Radical Republicans. This plan would be much harsher on the South, coming about after Republicans felt Johnson’s

Get Access