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Reconstruction Of The United States

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Schutz, Jackson CRN 36889 T/R 9:35 20 September 2015 Reconstructing the Unconstructable Gunshots rang throughout American soil in the year 1861. The seven southern states seceded and formed the Confederate States of America. The remaining northern states were known as the Union. The central issue between the Union and the Confederacy was slavery which led to America’s bloodiest war, lasting four years and leaving roughly six hundred-thousand people dead. The North was victorious and the South’s infrastructure was severely crippled. All slaves were set free and a month before the official end to the war, Lincoln was assassinated, leaving Vice- President Andrew Johnson to take over the Presidency. The next task for America to tackle was the South’s reconstruction which would continue until 1877. Although reconstruction made the South go through many changes leading to lots of progress, it also had some fallbacks from the resentment present in the South. The 13th Amendment was passed saying, "Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction." Upon the emancipation of all black slaves inside the United States, children flocked to newly established schools made possible by missionaries, groups of ex-slaves, and even the Freedman’s Bureau. Congress set up the Freedman’s Bureau to aid black former slaves in the South.

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