400,000
acres distributed to ~40,000 formerly enslaved families
Jan→Sep
1865: eight months between distribution and confiscation
$0
compensation paid when land was returned to former enslavers
On January 12, 1865, General William Sherman met with twenty Black ministers in Savannah, Georgia. He asked them what freedpeople needed most. The ministers' spokesman, Garrison Frazier, answered without hesitation: land. "The way we can best take care of ourselves is to have land, and turn it into it by our own labor."
Four days later, Sherman issued Special Field Order No. 15. It set aside the Sea Islands of South Carolina and Georgia and a strip of coastal land up to 30 miles inland — approximately 400,000 acres of confiscated Confederate property — for settlement by formerly enslaved people. Each family would receive a plot of up to 40 acres. The Army would lend mules. Within months, 40,000 people had settled the land.
Abraham Lincoln was assassinated on April 14, 1865. Andrew Johnson became president. Johnson was a Tennessee Democrat who had owned enslaved people and opposed Reconstruction. In September 1865, he issued a pardon to nearly all former Confederates and ordered the land in Field Order No. 15 returned to its former owners.
Federal troops evicted the freedpeople who had settled the land. In some cases, the soldiers forcibly removed families who had built homes and planted crops. The forty acres were taken back. No compensation was paid. No alternative land was provided. The formerly enslaved returned to the same land, working for the same people who had held them in bondage, now as sharecroppers.
"The way we can best take care of ourselves is to have land, and turn it into it by our own labor."
— Rev. Garrison Frazier, speaking for the freedpeople to General Sherman, January 12, 1865
The Wealth Gap Starts Here
The 8-to-1 racial wealth gap in the United States today has a specific origin point: freedpeople were denied the land that would have been their economic foundation. 250 years of stolen labor had built no inherited wealth. The one federal program that could have created a starting point was revoked in eight months. Sharecropping — debt bondage — replaced it. The wealth gap that opened in 1865 has compounded ever since.
2,000
Black men elected to public office during Reconstruction
16
Black members of the US Congress during Reconstruction
12 yrs
the entire period of meaningful federal Reconstruction: 1865–1877
For twelve years after the Civil War, the federal government attempted something unprecedented: the political, economic, and civic integration of four million formerly enslaved people into American democracy. Under Radical Reconstruction, federal troops occupied the South. The 14th and 15th Amendments guaranteed citizenship and voting rights. Freedmen's Bureau agents distributed food, established schools, and mediated labor disputes. Black men voted. Black men ran for office. Black men won.
Between 1865 and 1877, approximately 2,000 Black men held public office in the South — as state legislators, sheriffs, judges, tax collectors, and members of Congress. Mississippi sent two Black senators to Washington. South Carolina had a Black majority legislature. This was not theoretical democracy. It was functioning multiracial democracy, for the first time in American history.
It was systematically destroyed. The Ku Klux Klan, founded in 1865 by former Confederate officers, conducted a terrorist campaign against Black voters and officeholders. White supremacist paramilitary groups — the Red Shirts in South Carolina, the White League in Louisiana — used organized violence to suppress Black political participation. Politicians who supported Reconstruction were threatened, beaten, and killed.
The federal government, under pressure from Northern weariness with the war's costs and consequences, gradually withdrew. In 1876, a disputed presidential election produced the Compromise of 1877: Rutherford Hayes became president, and the last federal troops were withdrawn from the South. Reconstruction was over.
What Reconstruction Proved
The common claim that Black Americans were "not ready" for political participation after slavery is refuted by the historical record. When given the vote and federal protection, Black Americans built schools, elected qualified officials, passed civil rights legislation, and participated in democracy at every level. Reconstruction was not a failure of Black readiness. It was ended by organized white supremacist violence and federal abandonment.