| A | B |
| Reconstruction | Restoring the south to what it was. |
| 10% Plan | Abe Lincoln |
| The Captured and Abandoned Act (1863) | federal government could sieze 100 million dollars worth of plantations and cotton. |
| The Enforcement Act of 1870 | banned the use of terror force or bribery to prevent people from voting. |
| election 1872 | Grant wins |
| 1873 | dramatic downfall of the economy |
| yellow dog democrat | hardcore democrats, (south) |
| election 1876 | Rutherford B. Hayes (republican) |
| Compromise of 1877 | Hayes is president if troops are moved out of the south, and the south is given money for the railroads. |
| Wade-Davis Act | Anyone is the confederate military would not be pardoned, it got pocket vetoed |
| Pocket Veto | if the congress makes a bill and then recess' within 10 days, the bill is thrown away |
| Presidential Reconstruction | Andrew Johnson |
| Freedman's Bureau | Fed relief agency helping blacks |
| election 1868 | Grant wins |
| Feb. 1869 | Pass the 15th ammendment, get the right to vote |
| carpet baggers | northern business men coming to the south for opportunities |
| scalawags | white southern republicans who opposed secession and didn't own slaves. |
| Henry Grady | "New South", capital in ATL. |
| sharecropping | work someone elses land |
| tenant farming | live on someones land and farm it |
| Southern Homestead Act | Failure |
| Klu Klux Klan | SIck, sick white guys, should all be executed in a bad way. |