Unit

Sustaining a Living

Years: 1861-1877

Economy & Society

Historical Events, Movements, and Figures

01

Context

As the Union forces took more and more of the Confederacy’s territory, formerly enslaved Black Americans found themselves in an ambiguous economic position. While the Union Army often brought de-facto emancipation to these liberated areas, a system of free labor did not yet exist to integrate Black Americans into the economy on equal footing. With the Southern plantation economy in disarray, different communities tried various solutions. These experiments ranged from creating autonomous Black communities of subsistence farmers in South Carolina to exploiting Black workers in a system that would later become sharecropping. The Union army and Union government officials backed some of these plans, as no centralized policy yet existed to manage the integration of newly freed people into the economy. Although some Black families became landowners and experienced economic mobility, the vast majority of these economic experiments ended in the continued exploitation of formerly enslaved Black Americans in systems that closely resembled slavery–but with a different name.

02

Sources

03

Vocabulary

Civil War

A war fought between opposing groups within the same country or nation, typically over issues of governance, sovereignty, or territorial control.

Union

A union is an organized association or group of workers who come together to protect their rights, advocate for better wages and working conditions, and negotiate with employers on behalf of their members. Unions play a significant role in collective bargaining and labor representation.

Confederacy

A union or alliance of states, nations, or parties for a common purpose or goal, often used to refer to the Confederate States of America during the Civil War.

Enslavement

The act of making someone a slave or subjecting them to slavery, bondage, or involuntary servitude.

Plantation

A large agricultural estate or farm, typically in tropical or subtropical regions, dedicated to the cultivation of cash crops such as sugar, cotton, tobacco, or coffee, and characterized by extensive landholdings, labor-intensive production methods, and hierarchical social structures, including the use of coerced or enslaved labor, historically associated with colonialism, imperialism, and plantation economies.

Port Royal Experiment

A social and economic initiative implemented by Union authorities during the American Civil War in 1862 on the Sea Islands off the coast of South Carolina, aimed at providing land, education, and economic opportunities to newly emancipated African Americans, as well as addressing issues of labor, land tenure, and citizenship rights in the post-emancipation South. The Port Royal Experiment involved the establishment of schools, churches, and cooperative farming communities, and sought to empower formerly enslaved individuals and promote self-sufficiency and economic independence.

Andrew Johnson

The 17th President of the United States (1865-1869) who succeeded Abraham Lincoln after his assassination and oversaw the early Reconstruction period following the Civil War.

Sharecropping

Sharecropping was an agricultural system prevalent in the Southern United States after the Civil War, in which landless farmers, often formerly enslaved individuals, rented land and equipment from landowners in exchange for a share of the crops grown.

Field Order No. 15

A military order issued by Union General William T. Sherman in 1865, during the Civil War, which allocated confiscated land along the southern coast of South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida for the settlement of formerly enslaved African Americans. This order is also known as the "40 Acres and a Mule" promise, although it was later revoked by President Andrew Johnson.

Reconstruction

The period in American history following the Civil War, approximately from 1865 to 1877, where efforts were made to rebuild and transform the Southern states that had seceded from the Union. It aimed to address issues such as the integration of formerly enslaved African Americans into society.

Racial Wealth Gap

The disparity in wealth accumulation between different racial groups within a society, resulting from historical discrimination, disparities in access to education and employment opportunities, housing segregation, and systemic racism in financial institutions.

Reparations

Compensation or restitution provided to individuals or communities who have been harmed or wronged, typically as a result of historical injustices such as slavery, colonialism, or genocide, aiming to acknowledge past wrongs and promote reconciliation and justice.