Thursday, October 30, 2025

Video Reaction Post

 The period following the Civil War was one of the most transformative eras in American history, especially for African Americans. From the ashes of slavery emerged stories of resilience, struggle, and determination that would shape the nation for generations to come.

One of the most inspiring figures of this era was Booker T. Washington, who was born enslaved in Virginia. Washington promised himself he would change his fate and taught himself to read. He worked as a janitor to pay for his education, and by age 25, he founded the Tuskegee Institute for African Americans in Alabama. The school focused on vocational education, teaching practical skills like farming. Under his leadership, it grew to serve 800 students across 30 buildings. Washington's famous speech in Atlanta about education garnered national attention, and in 1901, he became the first Black leader invited to dine at the White House. His philosophy was clear: education and economic empowerment were the keys to success.

However, the path to progress was dramatically altered by Lincoln's assassination on April 14th, 1865. John Wilkes Booth killed President Lincoln, derailing his vision to heal a divided nation. Lincoln had developed a moderate approach to rebuilding the South with his 10 percent plan, wanting Southern states to rejoin the Union quickly. When Lincoln expressed his desire to give African Americans the right to vote, Booth switched from wanting to kidnap him to wanting to kill him. After Lincoln's death, Andrew Johnson allowed Southern states to rejoin America with no punishment. These states quickly made Black Codes and maintained white supremacy. Lincoln's death didn't just end a presidency but altered an entire plan for reconstruction.

The aftermath of the Civil War brought freedom to four million formerly enslaved people, but from this emerged sharecropping, described by many as "slavery under a different name." Plantations were divided into small plots worked mostly by Black people but also some poor whites, who labored for the ability to live there and receive some of the crops. Most sharecroppers ended the season in debt, having to work another year to pay it off. By 1870, only 30,000 African Americans owned land. The system was designed to maintain white supremacy. Sharecroppers couldn't sell independently and could only meet as a group on Sundays. Those who challenged the system faced intimidation, violence, or death. This oppressive system didn't end until after World War II.

Despite these challenges, the Reconstruction era from 1865 to 1877 witnessed the biggest political changes in American history for Black people. The 14th and 15th Amendments truly opened the door for
political participation. Black men rushed to register to vote, and Black votes determined election results across the South. Sixteen Black members even served in Congress during this period.


As conditions in the South remained difficult, six million African Americans participated in what became known as the Great Migration, leaving the South and heading north and west. They were escaping economic hardship, Jim Crow laws, and lynchings. Black families headed to industrial cities like New York and Philadelphia, where they found jobs in factories and earned steady wages for the first time in their lives. Black communities became vibrant centers of culture and opportunity. The North was no promised land though. African Americans faced redlining practices forcing them into certain neighborhoods, but even with these challenges, they didn't return to the South. The Great Migration proved that African Americans would seek freedom and opportunity wherever they could find it.

AI Disclosure- Claude AI was used in this blog post to transform my notes from watching the videos into a smooth flowing, and well-written blog post. 

Carpetbaggers: The Complex Legacy of Reconstruction's Most Controversial Figures

When most people hear the word "carpetbagger," they probably think of greedy Northerners swooping into the South after the Civil War to make a quick buck. But the real story is way more complicated than that stereotype suggests.

Where Did the Name Come From?

Between 1865 and 1877, during the Reconstruction period, thousands of Northerners packed up and moved south. They got labeled "carpetbaggers" because they showed up with these cheap suitcases made out of carpet material. To Southerners dealing with the aftermath of a devastating war, these flimsy bags symbolized exactly what they suspected: that these newcomers arrived with basically nothing and were just there to take advantage of the South's weakness.

Who Were These People Really?

Here's the thing though, carpetbaggers weren't all the same. Some honestly believed they could help rebuild the South and make life better for formerly enslaved people. They saw Reconstruction as a chance to create a more equal society and help the country heal after being torn apart by war.

But yeah, there were also plenty who came for selfish reasons. Some wanted to buy up cheap land, start businesses without much competition, or gain political power while Southern governments were still figuring things out. These guys definitely took advantage of the chaos and economic collapse to get ahead.

The truth is that carpetbaggers were a mixed bag, and whether they're remembered as heroes or villains usually depends on who's telling the story.


What Did They Actually Do?

The impact carpetbaggers had on the South was pretty significant, both good and bad.

The Good Stuff

Working alongside freedmen and Southern white Republicans (who got called "scalawags"), carpetbaggers actually accomplished some impressive things. They helped create the South's first real public school systems—something the region had never really had before. Mississippi's 1868 constitution, for instance, required the state to set up free public schools for everyone. They pushed through civil rights laws to protect Black Americans and worked on rebuilding infrastructure like roads and railroads that helped the economy recover. A lot of them genuinely thought they were building something better.

The Backlash

But not everyone was happy about it. Many white Southerners absolutely hated carpetbaggers, seeing them as outsiders profiting off their defeat and suffering. Whether that was fair or not, the anger was real, and it had serious consequences.

Carpetbaggers became symbols of everything Southerners resented about Northern control. Groups like the Ku Klux Klan used extreme violence against them, along with freedmen and anyone who supported Reconstruction. The Klan burned schools, beat and murdered voters, and even killed elected officials to take back control.

Southern Democrats jumped on this resentment. They ran propaganda campaigns painting all carpetbaggers as corrupt thieves, whether it was true or not. By the mid-1870s, they'd managed to push Republicans out of power across most of the South. This basically ended Reconstruction and opened the door for Jim Crow laws that enforced segregation and discrimination for the next 90 years.

What's the Takeaway?

Looking back, the carpetbagger story shows just how messy and complicated Reconstruction really was. Some carpetbaggers tried to make things better and promote equality. Others were just out for themselves. But the negative image stuck so strongly that it helped undo a lot of the progress that had been made toward racial justice. The Compromise of 1877 basically sealed the deal, pulling federal troops out and letting the South go back to white supremacist rule.

The real tragedy isn't just about whether carpetbaggers were good or bad people. It's about how quickly the country gave up on trying to create a fairer South when things got difficult.


AI Disclosure-  Claude AI was used in this blog post to transform my speech into an understandable blog post. I then edited the post to make it clearer and sound more like me.



Wednesday, October 22, 2025

Gone With the Wind

Gone With the Wind is a famous old movie set in the South during the Civil War. Although I had heard people talk about the movie and how it was a must-watch, I never ended up watching it. Finally, watching even just the first half made me realize it isn't just an old romance movie; it's about how people change in hard times, specifically through the main character, Scarlett.


Even after watching just the first half of the movie, Scarlett's character changed a lot. At the beginning of the movie, she was a wealthy woman who grew up privileged, but once the war hit, that all changed. While the movie is focused mainly on the wealthy white families, it skips over a big issue during this time, which was slavery. It doesn't show the full harsh reality of what it was like for slaves during this time. Although slavery is kind of skipped over, the movie still shows how people deal with the hardship and life getting hard, especially during a time of war. 



The main character, Scarlet, is a rich, spoiled white girl, focused on her looks and the attention she gets from people. Specifically, she wants attention from Ashley Wilkes, whom she believes she is in love with and wants to marry. However, Ashley Wilkes is set to marry Scarlett's cousin, Melanie Hamilton. Scarlett, knowing her cousin is marrying Ashley Wilkes, still wants and believes that she can marry him instead of her cousin marrying him. This shows how she doesn't really care about other people's feelings, as long as she gets what she wants. 


Even as the war starts and everything around Scarlet is falling apart, she doesn't really change. She still acts spoiled and expects to get whatever she wants, even when the world around her is at war and suffering. Instead of growing up and maturing, and realizing how serious the situation is when the world around her is suffering, she continues to only think about herself and what she wants from others. 


Even when her Mother, Ellen O'Hara, dies, she still doesn't show any signs of maturing or growing up. She is stuck focusing on her own desires and wants, rather than the collapsing world around her. This shows that Scarlet can't learn from or accept what is happening around her, and change, she has to stay the same and try to live her old life that isn't there anymore. 


While watching the movie, there was one big thing that stood out to me, which was how little it showed of slavery. The movie mainly focuses on the rich white families and their problems, missing a big part of life back then, which was the slaves and how they lived and were treated. 


The character Mammy, played by Hattie McDaniel, is shown as a strong and smart woman who really keeps everything together, but it doesn't show the harsh reality of what her life was like as a slave. The movie makes it as if she were treated as part of the family and that she was treated fairly, but looking at history, that obviously isn't true. The movie tries to portray the South as an elegant and almost dramatic place, but it ignores what was really happening in the South during that time, which was slavery. 


While Gone With the Wind does a good job of showing emotional struggles, it also feels more like a fantasy version of history during this time. The movie focuses mainly on the rich white people and what their lives were like during this time, it doesn't show the full truth of what this time is like in the South. 


Friday, October 17, 2025

Wild Bill Hickok: A Legacy Forged in the Fight Against Slavery

When we think of Wild Bill Hickok today, images of gunfights and frontier justice usually come to mind. However, before James Butler Hickok became a legendary figure of the American West, he was shaped by principles that ran much deeper than his reputation with a pistol. His early commitment to abolition and freedom reveals a man whose character was forged long before he became famous.

Born in 1837 in Troy Grove, Illinois, Hickok grew up in a household where moral conviction wasn't just preached—it was practiced. His father, William Alonzo Hickok, was a dedicated abolitionist who transformed their family farm into a station on the Underground Railroad. This wasn't a symbolic gesture or philosophical position. The Hickok family actively risked their safety and livelihood to help enslaved people escape to freedom. Young James witnessed firsthand the courage of those fleeing bondage and learned that true character reveals itself through action, not words.

These experiences left an indelible mark on Hickok. He saw the physical and emotional scars carried by people who had suffered under slavery. He understood that freedom wasn't merely an abstract political concept—it was a fundamental human right that demanded protection. When his father died in 1852, fourteen-year-old James carried forward these lessons as a guiding principle for his life.

The true test of Hickok's convictions came in 1856 when he and his brother Lorenzo traveled to Kansas Territory. They arrived during the violent period known as "Bleeding Kansas," when pro-slavery and anti-slavery forces clashed over whether Kansas would enter the Union as a free or slave state. Border Ruffians from Missouri were attempting to force slavery into the territory through intimidation and violence. Hickok, only nineteen years old, faced a choice: remain neutral or take a stand.

He chose to fight. Joining General James Lane's Free State Forces, Hickok took up arms to defend Free State settlements and prevent the expansion of slavery into Kansas. This wasn't a decision made lightly or for personal glory. It reflected the principles his father had instilled in him and his own unwavering belief in human freedom. From 1856 to 1857, he served alongside others who believed that allowing slavery to spread would betray everything America claimed to stand for.

The Free State forces ultimately prevailed, and in March 1858, twenty-year-old Hickok was elected constable of Monticello Township in Johnson County, Kansas. This position represented more than just law enforcement—it symbolized the victory of freedom over bondage in Kansas. Every day he wore that badge, Hickok upheld the values for which he and countless others had risked their lives.

What makes Hickok's story particularly compelling is that he never sought recognition for his abolitionist activities. He wasn't a politician crafting speeches or a preacher delivering sermons. He was simply a man who believed that when confronted with injustice, action was required. His legacy reminds us that history judges people not by their words but by their choices when tested.

Wild Bill Hickok's later fame as a gunfighter and lawman has overshadowed his early commitment to abolition, but understanding this part of his life gives us a more complete picture of who he was. Before the shootouts and legends, there was a young man who learned from his father that some principles are worth fighting for. His involvement in Bleeding Kansas and his family's work on the Underground Railroad demonstrate that the values we hold dear must be defended through action, not just rhetoric. In standing against slavery, James Butler Hickok embodied the courage and conviction that defined the best of his generation.

AI disclosure- Claude AI was used in this blog post to transform my speech into an understandable blog post. I then edited the post to make it sound more like me and clearer.