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Reconstruction And Reconstruction

Decent Essays

The Emancipation Proclamation of 1863, issued by Abraham Lincoln, launched the United States into a groundbreaking point in history where blacks were no longer to be considered property, but free individuals. Following the Civil War, The Reconstruction Era was led by President Andrew Johnson and spanned the time between 1865 and 1877. This period was an attempt to rejoin the Southern Confederates with the Union, as well as to haul blacks from a status of subjugation to become active participants in the American society. On a broad scale, Reconstruction helped blacks to gain freedom; they obtained citizenship and had a political role in society. However, on a narrower level, this period failed in achieving its goal. Blacks continued to be segregated socially and weren’t treated as equals to their white counterparts.
During the Reconstruction era, a series of laws were passed to give blacks a position in political American society. These laws were implemented into the Constitution as the Thirteenth, Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments. The thirteenth amendment was added at the start of Reconstruction in 1865. It strengthened the emancipation proclamation, officially abolishing slavery. In 1868, the fourteenth amendment made all people born in the U.S. American citizens and are therefore equally protected under the law and entitled to vote if they are male and over twenty-one years of age. This included blacks. The fifteenth amendment reinforced the fourteenth by mandating

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