Radical Republicans
RADICAL REPUBLICANS
RADICAL REPUBLICANS. The Radical Republicans were a wing of the Republican Party organized around an uncompromising opposition to slavery before and during the Civil War and a vigorous campaign to secure rights for freed slaves during Reconstruction.
In the late 1840s, before the Republican Party was created, a small group of antislavery radicals in Congress (including Salmon Chase and Charles Sumner in the Senate and Joshua Giddings, George Julian, and Thaddeus Stevens in the House) formed an unofficial alliance. They were ostracized at first, but as the decade wore on and the Fugitive Slave Law (1850), the Kansas-Nebraska Act (1854), and the Dred Scott decision (1857) seemed to prove to many northerners that the South was in fact conspiring against farmers and workers, their political fortunes improved. Radicals had already staked out the position to which moderates increasingly felt driven.
When the Republican Party was organized in 1854, it attracted antislavery advocates from the Free Soil and Democratic Parties and those left politically homeless by the collapse of the Whig Party. Many former Whigs wanted to turn the party into a new platform for their conservative economic policies, but the Radicals, who had belonged to all three antecedent parties, were determined to structure Republicanism around opposition to slavery. They largely succeeded. When secession came in the winter of 1860–1861, the Radicals refused to pursue a compromise that might head off violent conflict. They agitated for vigorous prosecution of the war, emancipation, and the raising of black regiments. Though they considered President Abraham Lincoln too moderate for their tastes, he appointed Radicals Salmon Chase and Edwin Stanton to his cabinet. Moreover, Lincoln often followed their recommendations, firing a succession of generals and issuing the Emancipation Proclamation, though he did so according to his own timetable and in his own more compromising style.
During Reconstruction the Radicals urged the full extension of rights, and especially the franchise, to blacks. But President Andrew Johnson imposed an extremely mild plan for Reconstruction that did not guarantee legal equality for freed slaves, and a majority of Republicans supported him at first. The southern states, however, exploited the leniency by using strict black codes to reduce former slaves to virtual servitude. Republican moderates again felt driven to the position already occupied by the Radicals, and Congress overrode presidential vetoes of the Freedmen's Bureau and the Civil Rights Act of 1866, and passed the Fourteenth Amendment (guaranteeing equality before the law), thus beginning the period of Congressional, or Radical, Reconstruction.
After President Ulysses Grant took office, the Radicals gradually lost influence. Their zealous yet unsuccessful campaign to remove Johnson from office had cast them as fanatics, and by the end of the decade, they were struggling against a fairly pervasive antiblack backlash and their own sense that they had done much of what they had set out to do. The Democrats won a majority in the House in 1874, and Reconstruction was ended in 1877.
Radicals finally pushed through the Fifteenth Amendment (1869), granting black men the franchise, but it would be another century before former slaves in the South were able to vote freely. Reconstruction stalled, and the racial climate got steadily worse, but for a brief moment around 1870, America looked something like what the Radical Republicans had imagined in 1854.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Foner, Eric. Free Soil, Free Labor, Free Men: The Ideology of the Republican Party before the Civil War. New York: Oxford University Press, 1970.
———. Reconstruction: America's Unfinished Revolution, 1863– 1877. New York: Harper and Row, 1988.
Trefousse, Hans L. The Radical Republicans: Lincoln's Vanguard for Racial Justice. New York: Knopf, 1968.
Jeremy Derfner
See also Civil War ; Reconstruction ; Republican Party .
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Bronx RHIO First to "Go Live" in New York City; Now Sharing Patient Data From 55 Care Sites.
Business Wire; 10/6/2008; 700+ words
; NEW YORK -- The Bronx RHIO, representing 80 percent of the providers...exchanging patient data. To date, the Bronx RHIO has received consent forms from over...There are now 55 care locations in the Bronx whose patients' clinical data can be accessed...
|
|
BRONX BOROUGH PRESIDENT CARRIÓN, TRANSPORTATION ALTERNATIVES HOST ANNUAL TOUR DE BRONX
News Wire article from: US Fed News Service, Including US State News; 10/23/2007; 599 words
; The Bronx Borough President issued the following press release: Bronx Borough President Adolfo Carrin along with Transportation Alternatives, Aetna and the Bronx Tourism Council hosted the annual Tour de Bronx. Now...
|
|
Bronx Democratic machine 'assaults' Black leadership
Newspaper article from: New York Beacon, The; 8/21/2002; 700+ words
; ...Assembly District, is being attacked by the Bronx County Democratic Organization in an attempt...ballot. "There are powers that be in the Bronx Democratic machine that think Black leadership should be extinct in Bronx County" fumed Stevenson. "They feel...
|
|
South Bronx enjoying its moment in the spotlight.(Commercial Sales & Leasing)
Magazine article from: Real Estate Weekly; 2/21/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...synonymous with urban blight, the South Bronx is enjoying its much deserved comeback...America, Barbara Corcoran, placed the South Bronx second in the "Five Hot Real Estate Markets...place their bets," Corcoran said. The Bronx is also New York City's second fastest...
|
|
Bronx beep kicks off Bronx Week 2005
Newspaper article from: New York Amsterdam News; 6/22/2005; ; 334 words
; Hamilton, Charles, Jr. New York Amsterdam News 06-22-2005 The Bronx will have its moment in the sun during Bronx Week 2005, as provided by Bronx Borough President Adolfo Carrion, Jr., Montefiore Medical Center and TheBronxAtWork...
|
|
BRONX TALES BOROUGH'S NARROW STREETS BREATHE BOBBY DARIN
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 12/19/2004; ; 700+ words
; NEW YORK--The Bronx is a dense forest of weathered tenements, narrow streets...Bobby Darin was born in this massive appeal of the Bronx. Life is punctuated with counterpoints and the Bronx may explain why much of Darin's persona was defined...
|
|
Bronx Educational Opportunity Center to convert Port Authority building into training and daycare center. (Port Authority of New York and New Jersey)
PR Newswire; 6/8/1989; 700+ words
; BRONX EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITY CENTER TO CONVERT...NEW YORK, June 8 /PRNewswire/ -- The Bronx Educational Opportunity Center (EOC) plans...s Bathgate Industrial Park in the South Bronx into a training center for up to 1,000...
|
|
Bronx wants to host drug research
Newspaper article from: The Weekly Gleaner; 8/20/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...conference, held at the Murray Cohen Auditorium at the Bronx-Lebanon Hospital Center, Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. joined with New...representatives of the pharmaceutical industry and the Bronx healthcare community to call on the national healthcare...
|
|
BRONX COMMUNITY COLLEGE PRAISES SPONSORS OF 10K, 5K RUN, 2 MILE FITNESS WALK AT BREAKFAST
News Wire article from: US Fed News Service, Including US State News; 2/6/2007; 700+ words
; ...York issued the following news release: Bronx Community College's 10K and 5K Run and...in its 29th year. Sustaining one of the Bronx's longest and most successful running...Professor and former Athletic Director at Bronx Community College. Part of the funds raised...
|
|
Bronx tales
Magazine article from: The Village Voice; 8/10/1999; ; 700+ words
; 'Urban Mythologies: The Bronx Represented Since the 1960s' The Bronx Museum of the Arts Through September 5 BY JERRY SALTZ...exhibition makes something as complex and horrific as the Bronx's 40-year season in hell convincingly real. This...
|
|
the Bronx
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
the Bronx borough of New York City, coextensive with Bronx co. (1990 pop. 1,203,789), land area 42 sq mi...from Native Americans in 1639. New York City acquired the Bronx, which had been the lower portion of Westchester co...
|
|
Bronx
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Bronx river, c.20 mi (30 km) long, issuing from Kensico Reservoir, SE N.Y., and flowing SW through the Bronx into the East River. The Bronx River Parkway, one of the first limited-access highways in the New York City area, parallels a portion of the river.
|
|
Bronx cheer
Book article from: The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English
Bronx cheer • n. a sound of derision or contempt made by blowing through closed lips with the tongue between them; a raspberry.
|
|
Indian Wants the Bronx, The
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to American Theatre
Indian Wants the Bronx, The (1968), a one‐act play by Israel Horovitz. [Astor Place Theatre, 204 perf.] At a quiet Manhattan bus...
|
|
Johnson, Robert T. 1948–
Book article from: Contemporary Black Biography
...validity of the legal system he serves. The Bronx Borough President, Fernando Ferrer, told...February 18, 1948, at Lincoln Hospital in Bronx, New York, one of New York City ’...graduated from James Monroe High School in the Bronx in 1966, he enrolled in the Baruch School...
|