Thursday, January 21, 2010
Conquest of the West
According to the 2000 Federal Census, four of the five poorest counties in the United States contained Indian reservations--despite passage in 1988 of the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, which has provided many native peoples with a financial bonanza. This is especially true for those Indian nations who were able to establish casinos east of the Mississippi River; the Mashantucket Pequot casino, Foxwoods, generates about $1 billion a year. At the other end of the spectrum, however, the Little Big Horn Casino, near the site of Custer's Last Stand, generated an income of about $100 a month during its first year of operation. The Indian gaming industry in 2007 generated more than $22 billion in revenue, more than the combined income of the NBA, NFL, and MLB. That income is unequally distributed, however; more than half of all reservation Indians live in Montana, Nevada, North and South Dakota, and Oklahoma--most far from the population centers that the gaming industry counts on to visit and lose money. In fact, this population of reservation Indians receives less than 3 percent of gaming proceeds, or about $400 a year. The situation that many Indian people find themselves in today is a consequence of events that took place in the West in the years immediately after the Civil War.
I. The West After the Civil War
A. Mining Boom--much of the population explosion in the West can be attributed to the discovery of gold and silver in abundant quantities, which in turn attracted prospectors from around the world to seek their fortune; most of these men eventually had to settle for working for the corporations that quickly established themselves to control the mining industry in the region--as they did for most other economic endeavors, as well.
1. California Gold Rush--took place in 1849, but established the pattern for subsequent mineral discoveries, as well.
a. Especially notable because the discovery of gold in California also attracted prospectors from China. In subsequent years, Chinese workers also provided the labor that built the railroads through the Sierra Nevada mountains, and helped to connect the west coast the the eastern half of the United States. When railroad construction diminished, however, and these Chinese workers began to compete for "white jobs," laws were passed to limit the civil and economic rights of Chinese Americans, and eventually a federal law was passed to end Chinese immigration (with one large exception).
2. Comstock Lode--perhaps the richest deposit of both gold and silver in one location; some ores mined at Comstock were worth nearly $4,000 a ton.
3.Gold Fever--the immense wealth obtainable attracted all kinds of "entrepreneurs" to the site of the discovery--everyone from shopkeepers charging outrageous prices for goods, claim holders who "salted" their claims in order to sell parts to gullible investors, to gamblers and pimps and madams who ran the "entertainment" industry.
B. Homesteaders--during the Civil War, the Homestead Act was passed to provide free land for those Americans willing to settle on it. Unfortunately, most poor Americans (who were the supposed targets for the legislation) were unable to raise the money to move west to claim the land, and a less than vigorous enforcement of the stipulation precluding land speculation meant that it was of little benefit for them.
1. The Great American Desert--as it was depicted in early maps, much of the West is a semi-arid steppe. While the land is exceptionally fertile, the lack of rainfall over much of it meant that it was difficult to grow crops there.
2. Land bonanza--the lack of success of the Homestead Act, and the unreliability of rainfall, meant that much of the land ended up in the hands of speculators, who eventually used it to graze cattle.
3. The Western Land Wars--during the free range period in the west, cattle were allowed to graze freely on the public land, since it was difficult to acquire a sufficient quantity of land to raise a herd on what you could legally own. The lucrative nature of the cattle business, and the invention of barbed wire, led many ranchers to attempt to fence of the public lands that they used, to prevent others from using the land as well; this led to the range wars that became popularly depicted in the movies.
a. When the beef market collapsed, ranchers were left with an overabundance of cattle. When ranchers held them off the market in 1883-1884, severe weather on the plains killed anywhere from 90 to 95 percent of the herd, wiping out the investment of many of these ranchers, including one "dude" rancher by the name of Theodore Roosevelt.
C. The Fate of Native Americans--all of this settlement occurred because of the removal of the people who had originally settled there--the Lakota, the Blackfeet, the Cheyenne, and the Comanche.
1. The Buffalo--all of the Plains Indians shared an attachment to the buffalo, which provided their source of protein, clothing, and shelter. Before the American Civil War, there were probably in excess of 13 million buffalo roaming the Great Plains; by 1890 there were less than 1,000. This fact is largely overlooked when the issue of native acceptance of government treaties, which they never expected the government to live up to, anyway.
a. "Buffalo Bill" Cody--began as a scout for a railroad company, shooting buffalo to provide beef for the work gangs. Realized that the romanticized ideal of the "wild west" that most Americans had could readily be turned into cash--and he did so, not only in the United States but around the world.
b.Triumph of technology--the buffalo herds were not only decimated by the need to feed railroad work gangs, but also because tanners in Philadelphia invented a way to inexpensively process buffalo hides to make cheap leather. This meant that millions of buffalo were killed, skinned, and their carcasses left to rot on the prairie to make cheap boots for workers, children's shoes, etc.--in excess of 2 million between 1872-1874 alone.
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
Politics from the Gilded Age to the Progressive Era
1876 Election – after the eight years of the Grant administration (personified by periods of spectacular corruption), both parties ran candidates with impeccable personal integrity; the Democrats former New York governor Samuel Tilden, and the Republicans former Ohio Governor (from nearby Fremont ) Rutherford B. Hayes.
B.) People’s Party – the voice of disaffected western and southern farmers.
A) Disputed election – in an election that was extremely close, Tilden apparently edged Hayes in the popular vote, but neither man had enough electoral votes to claim victory.
1) Returns from South – the election returns from three Southern states were disputed by the Republican Party—South Carolina , Louisiana , and Florida . In those three states, allegations of voter intimidation and outright fraud plagued the returns.
2) Oregon results – were in turn disputed by the Democratic Party (which limited its dispute to only three of the state’s electoral votes
B) Southern Democrats cut a deal – in return for the withdrawal of federal troops from the states of South Carolina, Mississippi, and Louisiana(?), Southern Democrats pull their support from Tilden, which allows the House of Representatives to declare Hayes the winner of the election.
C) Reign of “His Fraudulency” – the method which put Hayes in office undermined his best attribute, his personal integrity.
1) One-term presidency – Hayes quickly decided to limit his political career to one term; whether he could have been elected to another term is in some dispute by historians.
II) 1880 – Republican Stalwarts and Half-Breeds
A) Stalwarts – faction led by Senator Roscoe Conkling of New York , advocated returning U.S. Grant to the Presidency, a Radical Southern policy, and the spoils system
1) “Waving the Bloody Shirt” – appeal to the support of all patriotic northerners to continue punishing the Southern traitors
B) Half-Breeds – faction of the Republican Party led by James G. Blaine, senator from Maine ; advocated Blaine for presidency, a more moderate Southern policy, and tepid support for civil service reforms
C) 1880 Republican Convention – chooses James A. Garfield as a compromise candidate over Grant and John Sherman.
1) Garfield wins election – Garfield won the fall election over fellow veteran Winfield Scott Hancock by only 39,000 votes, although his electoral college vote total was a much more comfortable 214 to 155 margin.
D) Garfield assassinated – Garfield was assassinated only four months after taking office, in July of 1881, by a disgruntled Stalwart faction office seeker; succeeded in office by Stalwart Chester A. Arthur
1) Civil Service reforms – as a result of the public outcry over the assassination of Garfield , civil service reforms were a popular issue with much of the voting public; surprisingly, Arthur supported these efforts. He also led the fight to lower the protective tariff. These two stands on issues made him popular with the general public, but unpopular within his own party.
III) 1884 Blaine v. Cleveland
A) The Continental Liar from Maine – Blaine, like many of his collegues in the Senate during this period, had used his political position to help line his own pockets (it was called the “Rich Man’s Club” for nothing); when this reputation was coupled with two blunders of his courting rich supporters, and Protestant minister supporter who characterized Democrats as the party of “rum, Romanism, and rebellion” raised the ire of ethnic voters.
B) “Ma, Ma, Where’s Pa?” – referred to the illegitimate child Cleveland fathered by a Buffalo widow; despite this peccadillo, Cleveland projected an image of personal integrity which resonated with enough voters to get elected.
1) Cleveland ’s view of limited government – refused to extend pensions for Union veterans, but did sign into law the Interstate Commerce Commission, which began regulating the railroad industry.
IV) The Tariff Issue and the 1888 Election
A) The Tariff as the “mother of all trusts” – the various tariffs protected various American industries, but also raised prices of goods for consumers; Cleveland decides to make this a campaign issue.
B) Republican candidate – Benjamin Harrison from Indiana, grandson of the former President; Union veteran and lawyer.
C) The campaign
1) Murchison Letter – dirty trick, letter getting a prominent British politician to “endorse” Cleveland
2) Cleveland wins popular voted, but with Harrison winning crucial electoral votes in Indiana and New York
3) Harrison as president – owed his election to the votes of Union veterans, which he repaid by signing the Dependent Pension Act that Congress passed in 1890 (allowed any veteran incapable of performing manual labor to collect a pension); this doubled the pension rolls by 1893.
(a) Sherman Anti-Trust Act – forbade contracts, combinations, or conspiracies in restraint of trade or in the effort to establish monopolies in interstate or foreign commerce. This law for the next decade was little enforced by successive administrations, however, except to use the law against trade unions.
(b) Sherman Silver Purchase Act – required the US Treasury to purchase 4.5 million ounces (over 280,000 pounds) of silver each month, and to issue treasury notes that were redeemable in either gold or silver. This inflationary money policy was not inflationary enough to please either representatives from the western silver mining states, are the farmers who were increasingly feeling the effects of falling prices and tighter credit.
(c) McKinley Tariff (1890) – increased the tariff on goods imported into the country an average of nearly 50%. The tariff issue proved not to be nearly as popular with the public as the Republican Party had assumed that it would be, with the result that the Congressional elections in 1890 returned a resounding number of Democrats to the House, and greatly decreased the margin of the Republicans in the Senate (one of the losers in the Senate included William McKinley himself).
V) Rise of “Third” Parties – because there was little difference between the two major parties on matters of substance, smaller, issue-driven parties began to proliferate.
A) Prohibition Party – concerned with the temperance issue; the bulk of the membership of this party was made up of disaffected Republicans, and the incorporation of Prohibition Party platforms in local Republican Party campaigns probably contributed to the large ethnic voter turnout that the Democratic Party enjoyed.
Reconstruction
I) What they fought for
A) North – fought to end slave power (explain how this differs from ending slavery or abolition)
1) Fight to “save the Union” – northern opposition to the idea of secession.
2) Evolution of political ideals – the Emancipation Proclamation changed Northern war aims; it became not just a war to save the Union, but a war to end slavery.
3) Emancipation Proclamation – four reasons for Lincoln finally acceding to this demand:
(a) Changing public sentiment for the abolition of slavery
(b) Prevent England and France from entering the war on the side of the South.
(c) Expedient to undermine the Southern war effort – slavery allowed the South to utilize a much higher percentage of its adult white male population.
(d) Recognition by Lincoln that slaves were liberating themselves – that the Northern war effort was being aided by the labor actions of southern slaves.
B) South – fought to protect their homes from the invading Yankees; also fought to preserve the “southern way of life” (slavery)
1) Why southerners seceded – most people in the south had no say in the matter; whenever the question of secession was put to a popular vote, it was defeated.
2) Slavery as a social system – slavery was more than a means of organizing labor; it was a means of organizing society. Although poor whites were expected to show deference toward rich whites, but could expect deference from slaves. Poor white most often made up the slave patrols, which tracked down runaway slaves and enforced slave discipline away from the plantation. This investment in the benefits of “whiteness” was enough for many southerners to continue to fight to retain slavery.
II) Three phases of Reconstruction
A) Lincoln’s Plan – for Lincoln, Reconstruction was more of a wartime expediency than a plan to reunite the Union—many of his proposals had to do more with keeping border states within the Union, or undermining the Confederate war effort, than a plan to integrate African-American slaves into American society.
1) 1863 Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction – if 10% of white males who voted in 1860 took an oath of allegiance to the Constitution and the Union, and swore to uphold the laws dealing with emancipation, they were eligible to receive a Presidential pardon and begin forming a state government.
(a) Provisional governments were formed in Tennessee, Arkansas, and Louisiana under this plan
2) 1864 Wade-Davis Bill – product of small, but influential, group of so-called “Radical Republicans” who demanded a transformation of Southern society. Wade-Davis stipulated that a majority of white males declare their allegiance to the Union, and that only those who could provide proof that they had always remained loyal could vote and serve in the state constitutional conventions. In addition, the conventions themselves would have to abolish slavery, deny political rights to high-ranking civil and military officers of the Confederacy, and repudiate Confederate war debts.
(a) Lincoln opposed this measure, and was able to exercise a “pocket veto” by not signing the bill after Congress had adjourned.
(b) Wade-Davis Manifesto – accused Lincoln of usurping power and of attempting to use the readmitted states to ensure his re-election.
3) Lincoln’s final statement on Reconstruction – wanted no persecution, no revenge, no dramatic restructuring of southern social and economic life; how this would have faired with the Southern political response (the return of so many Confederate political leaders, restrictions placed upon newly-freed African Americans, etc.) no one can truly say; Lincoln’s best feature was his flexibility of response to changing situations.
III) Presidential Reconstruction – Congress was not in session from the time of Confederate surrender and Lincoln’s assassination until the late fall of 1865, so Johnson had a free hand to carry out what he thought Lincoln’s plans were for Reconstruction.
A) Andrew Johnson -- devout Southern Unionist, placed on the ticket with Lincoln in 1864 (when Lincoln ran as an Unionist, rather than on the Republican ticket) in a gesture of bipartisanship. Johnson came to political power in eastern Tennessee, opposing the power of large slave owners. Johnson himself owned slaves, however, and he was an extreme racist.
1) Johnson a strict Constitutionalist – believed that the Constitution was inviolent, and that the Southern states that had attempted to secede needed no Reconstruction, because secession was illegal and therefore these states had never seceded (what to do with the thousands of traitors who had served in the rebel army, however, Johnson never addressed).
(a) 1865 Proclamation of Amnesty – Lincoln proposed that those Southerners who were willing to take an oath of allegiance be granted full citizenship rights (except for officials and officers in the Confederate Army), and that they be allowed to set up local and state governments. Johnson added to this list of people that Lincoln had prohibited those who owned property worth more than $20,000, because Johnson believed these “aristocrats” were the ones responsible for the secession movement in the South.
(b) Southern provisional governments – in Southern states not already organized by Lincoln, Johnson appointed provisional governors authorized to call conventions, which were to invalidate secession ordinances, repudiate Confederate war debts, ratify the 13th amendment, and provide African Americans with limited voting rights.
2) Southern Intransigence – the political leaders of the new southern governments looked much like the political leaders of the Confederacy (including the Vice-President Alexander H. Stephens, four Confederate generals, eight colonels, six cabinet members, and a host of minor officials.
(a) Southern “Black Codes” – passage of laws restricting the freedoms of African Americans, which baldly revealed the intention of southerners in control to retain all of the trappings of slavery, even if the legal status was removed. Prohibited interracial marriages, restrictions were placed upon the property they were allowed to own, and they were required to enter into annual labor contracts, with a provision for punishment in case of violation (including forced labor).
(b) Land and Labor Questions – all Southerners, black and white, knew that how these questions were answered would determine the path that Reconstruction would take.
(i) “Forty Acres and a Mule” – in South Carolina and Georgia, William Tecumseh Sherman issued Field Order #15, which declared that former slaves under his jurisdiction would receive confiscated land, and an army mule to work it. The failure to follow through with this plan led African Americans to have to accept the system of sharecropping. President Johnson forced Sherman to retract this policy. (Relate this topic to the ongoing controversy over reparations for slavery).
(i) Freedmen expectations – because they had created most of the wealth for southern planters, many freedmen expected to receive land as compensation for their labors.
(ii) Promotion of self-sufficiency – by providing freedmen with land, they would be able to become self-sufficient, able to grow their own food.
(ii) Gang labor – resisted by freedmen, because it reminded them of restrictions they had under the slave system.
(i) Required freedmen to sign year-long labor contracts, and provided that those freedmen who could not prove that they had such a contract at the beginning of each year should be arrested, and their labor sold by the government to the highest bidder.
(iii) Sharecropping – emerged as kind of a compromise between freedmen and southern plantation owners, where freedmen rented land from plantation owners, who usually “furnished” sharecroppers implements, animals, a place to live, seed, and food in return for a share (usually at least half before freedmen paid back the owner for whatever had been furnished).
(i) Obviously, this system was open to abuses by the owning class, who often took advantage of the fact that the freedmen were often illiterate. Too often, this in fact turned into a system of debt peonage, with freed families falling deeper and deeper into debt, with no hope of ever paying it off.
IV) Political conflict – the initial high hopes that many (including many members of Congress) held for the leadership that Johnson would provide were dashed as the President to weak or no action against atrocities against freed people in the South – conflict that culminated in Johnson’s impeachment (which like our own recent experience, was an act of more political than criminal import).
A) Andrew Johnson – shared similar upbringing with Lincoln (little formal education, constant striving to better himself), but he lacked Lincoln’s political acumen, and he was bitterly racist (where Lincoln’s racism was more benign).
1) “Punishment for traitors” – initially, Johnson promised severe punishment for officials in the Confederate government, and the “aristocrats” that he felt had led the South into the war at any rate. Johnson soon began granting individual pardons to just these kinds of people, however, which contributed to his falling out with Congress.
(a) Intransigence of southern states – many of the early governments formed in the South incorporated leaders who had been active in the rebellious governments, and none of these early governments made any steps toward guaranteeing rights of any kind for freed people (parallels between this and the “massive resistance” that white southerners demonstrated during the civil rights movement—“the Second Reconstruction”)
2)Repudiation of secession and debt
A) North – fought to end slave power (explain how this differs from ending slavery or abolition)
1) Fight to “save the Union” – northern opposition to the idea of secession.
2) Evolution of political ideals – the Emancipation Proclamation changed Northern war aims; it became not just a war to save the Union, but a war to end slavery.
3) Emancipation Proclamation – four reasons for Lincoln finally acceding to this demand:
(a) Changing public sentiment for the abolition of slavery
(b) Prevent England and France from entering the war on the side of the South.
(c) Expedient to undermine the Southern war effort – slavery allowed the South to utilize a much higher percentage of its adult white male population.
(d) Recognition by Lincoln that slaves were liberating themselves – that the Northern war effort was being aided by the labor actions of southern slaves.
B) South – fought to protect their homes from the invading Yankees; also fought to preserve the “southern way of life” (slavery)
1) Why southerners seceded – most people in the south had no say in the matter; whenever the question of secession was put to a popular vote, it was defeated.
2) Slavery as a social system – slavery was more than a means of organizing labor; it was a means of organizing society. Although poor whites were expected to show deference toward rich whites, but could expect deference from slaves. Poor white most often made up the slave patrols, which tracked down runaway slaves and enforced slave discipline away from the plantation. This investment in the benefits of “whiteness” was enough for many southerners to continue to fight to retain slavery.
II) Three phases of Reconstruction
A) Lincoln’s Plan – for Lincoln, Reconstruction was more of a wartime expediency than a plan to reunite the Union—many of his proposals had to do more with keeping border states within the Union, or undermining the Confederate war effort, than a plan to integrate African-American slaves into American society.
1) 1863 Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction – if 10% of white males who voted in 1860 took an oath of allegiance to the Constitution and the Union, and swore to uphold the laws dealing with emancipation, they were eligible to receive a Presidential pardon and begin forming a state government.
(a) Provisional governments were formed in Tennessee, Arkansas, and Louisiana under this plan
2) 1864 Wade-Davis Bill – product of small, but influential, group of so-called “Radical Republicans” who demanded a transformation of Southern society. Wade-Davis stipulated that a majority of white males declare their allegiance to the Union, and that only those who could provide proof that they had always remained loyal could vote and serve in the state constitutional conventions. In addition, the conventions themselves would have to abolish slavery, deny political rights to high-ranking civil and military officers of the Confederacy, and repudiate Confederate war debts.
(a) Lincoln opposed this measure, and was able to exercise a “pocket veto” by not signing the bill after Congress had adjourned.
(b) Wade-Davis Manifesto – accused Lincoln of usurping power and of attempting to use the readmitted states to ensure his re-election.
3) Lincoln’s final statement on Reconstruction – wanted no persecution, no revenge, no dramatic restructuring of southern social and economic life; how this would have faired with the Southern political response (the return of so many Confederate political leaders, restrictions placed upon newly-freed African Americans, etc.) no one can truly say; Lincoln’s best feature was his flexibility of response to changing situations.
III) Presidential Reconstruction – Congress was not in session from the time of Confederate surrender and Lincoln’s assassination until the late fall of 1865, so Johnson had a free hand to carry out what he thought Lincoln’s plans were for Reconstruction.
A) Andrew Johnson -- devout Southern Unionist, placed on the ticket with Lincoln in 1864 (when Lincoln ran as an Unionist, rather than on the Republican ticket) in a gesture of bipartisanship. Johnson came to political power in eastern Tennessee, opposing the power of large slave owners. Johnson himself owned slaves, however, and he was an extreme racist.
1) Johnson a strict Constitutionalist – believed that the Constitution was inviolent, and that the Southern states that had attempted to secede needed no Reconstruction, because secession was illegal and therefore these states had never seceded (what to do with the thousands of traitors who had served in the rebel army, however, Johnson never addressed).
(a) 1865 Proclamation of Amnesty – Lincoln proposed that those Southerners who were willing to take an oath of allegiance be granted full citizenship rights (except for officials and officers in the Confederate Army), and that they be allowed to set up local and state governments. Johnson added to this list of people that Lincoln had prohibited those who owned property worth more than $20,000, because Johnson believed these “aristocrats” were the ones responsible for the secession movement in the South.
(b) Southern provisional governments – in Southern states not already organized by Lincoln, Johnson appointed provisional governors authorized to call conventions, which were to invalidate secession ordinances, repudiate Confederate war debts, ratify the 13th amendment, and provide African Americans with limited voting rights.
2) Southern Intransigence – the political leaders of the new southern governments looked much like the political leaders of the Confederacy (including the Vice-President Alexander H. Stephens, four Confederate generals, eight colonels, six cabinet members, and a host of minor officials.
(a) Southern “Black Codes” – passage of laws restricting the freedoms of African Americans, which baldly revealed the intention of southerners in control to retain all of the trappings of slavery, even if the legal status was removed. Prohibited interracial marriages, restrictions were placed upon the property they were allowed to own, and they were required to enter into annual labor contracts, with a provision for punishment in case of violation (including forced labor).
(b) Land and Labor Questions – all Southerners, black and white, knew that how these questions were answered would determine the path that Reconstruction would take.
(i) “Forty Acres and a Mule” – in South Carolina and Georgia, William Tecumseh Sherman issued Field Order #15, which declared that former slaves under his jurisdiction would receive confiscated land, and an army mule to work it. The failure to follow through with this plan led African Americans to have to accept the system of sharecropping. President Johnson forced Sherman to retract this policy. (Relate this topic to the ongoing controversy over reparations for slavery).
(i) Freedmen expectations – because they had created most of the wealth for southern planters, many freedmen expected to receive land as compensation for their labors.
(ii) Promotion of self-sufficiency – by providing freedmen with land, they would be able to become self-sufficient, able to grow their own food.
(ii) Gang labor – resisted by freedmen, because it reminded them of restrictions they had under the slave system.
(i) Required freedmen to sign year-long labor contracts, and provided that those freedmen who could not prove that they had such a contract at the beginning of each year should be arrested, and their labor sold by the government to the highest bidder.
(iii) Sharecropping – emerged as kind of a compromise between freedmen and southern plantation owners, where freedmen rented land from plantation owners, who usually “furnished” sharecroppers implements, animals, a place to live, seed, and food in return for a share (usually at least half before freedmen paid back the owner for whatever had been furnished).
(i) Obviously, this system was open to abuses by the owning class, who often took advantage of the fact that the freedmen were often illiterate. Too often, this in fact turned into a system of debt peonage, with freed families falling deeper and deeper into debt, with no hope of ever paying it off.
IV) Political conflict – the initial high hopes that many (including many members of Congress) held for the leadership that Johnson would provide were dashed as the President to weak or no action against atrocities against freed people in the South – conflict that culminated in Johnson’s impeachment (which like our own recent experience, was an act of more political than criminal import).
A) Andrew Johnson – shared similar upbringing with Lincoln (little formal education, constant striving to better himself), but he lacked Lincoln’s political acumen, and he was bitterly racist (where Lincoln’s racism was more benign).
1) “Punishment for traitors” – initially, Johnson promised severe punishment for officials in the Confederate government, and the “aristocrats” that he felt had led the South into the war at any rate. Johnson soon began granting individual pardons to just these kinds of people, however, which contributed to his falling out with Congress.
(a) Intransigence of southern states – many of the early governments formed in the South incorporated leaders who had been active in the rebellious governments, and none of these early governments made any steps toward guaranteeing rights of any kind for freed people (parallels between this and the “massive resistance” that white southerners demonstrated during the civil rights movement—“the Second Reconstruction”)
2)Repudiation of secession and debt