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Life After the Civil War What was life like for former slaves? Pgs. 184, 188- 189

Life After the Civil War What was life like for former slaves? Pgs. 184, 188-189

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Page 1: Life After the Civil War What was life like for former slaves? Pgs. 184, 188-189

Life After the Civil WarWhat was life like for former slaves?

Pgs. 184, 188-189

Page 2: Life After the Civil War What was life like for former slaves? Pgs. 184, 188-189

A Free People

• With the Union victory, 4 million enslaved people were freed.

• Free Africans quickly began to form new communities.

• They built churches and schools and opened businesses.

• Many former slaves began to search for family members who had been sold during slavery.

Page 3: Life After the Civil War What was life like for former slaves? Pgs. 184, 188-189

A Free People

• Newspapers were filled with ads asking for help in locating loved ones.

• Former slaves worked hard to build new lives. Yet life remained difficult.

• Often it was hard to find food, clothing, and shelter.

• Many began to look to the United States government for help.

Page 4: Life After the Civil War What was life like for former slaves? Pgs. 184, 188-189

New Amendments

• The 13th Amendment abolished slavery in the United States and was ratified on December 18, 1865.

Page 5: Life After the Civil War What was life like for former slaves? Pgs. 184, 188-189

New Amendments

• The 14th Amendment made blacks citizens of the United States and guaranteed them the same legal rights as whites. It was ratified on July 28, 1868.

Page 6: Life After the Civil War What was life like for former slaves? Pgs. 184, 188-189

New Amendments

• The 15th Amendment says that governments in the United States may not prevent a citizen from voting because of his race, color, or previous condition of servitude (slavery). It was ratified on February 3, 1870.

Page 7: Life After the Civil War What was life like for former slaves? Pgs. 184, 188-189

Former Confederate States Readmission to the Union

Page 8: Life After the Civil War What was life like for former slaves? Pgs. 184, 188-189

The Freedmen’s Bureau

• The Freedmen’s Bureau was set up by Congress in 1865 to help former slaves.

• The Bureau gave food and other supplies to freed slaves.

• The most important job of the Freedmen’s Bureau was education. Newly freed slaves were eager to learn to read and write.

• Over 4,000 schools were built to educate former slaves.

Page 9: Life After the Civil War What was life like for former slaves? Pgs. 184, 188-189
Page 10: Life After the Civil War What was life like for former slaves? Pgs. 184, 188-189

The Freedmen’s Bureau

• The Bureau also wanted to give free land to former slaves to farm.

• The land was to be taken from plantations taken during the war, but the government decided to give plantations back to their owners.

Page 11: Life After the Civil War What was life like for former slaves? Pgs. 184, 188-189

Sharecropping

• In search for jobs, some former slaves went back to work on plantations.

• Many planters welcomed them.

• Fields needed to be plowed, and crops needed to be planted

• Now, however, plantation owners had to pay Africans for their work.

Page 12: Life After the Civil War What was life like for former slaves? Pgs. 184, 188-189

Sharecropping

• In the days after the war, there was not much money. Instead of paying in cash, many landowners paid them in shares.

• A landowner would provide a cabin and supplies. (tools, mules, seeds, etc.)

• At harvest time the landowner would take part of the crops, plus enough to cover the cost of the worker’s rent and supplies. What was left was the workers share.

• Even in good times, most workers received very little, if anything at all.