Thursday, October 30, 2025

Video Reax


A Portrait of A Sharecropper’s Family

I just finished watching a bunch of videos on African American history for my class and honestly some of this stuff really shocked me. I knew slavery ended after the Civil War but I didn't realize how the system basically continued under a different name.

The whole sharecropping thing was basically a trap. After 1865, freed Black Americans and poor whites would farm plots of land owned by someone else. The landowner provided everything like seeds and tools, and the farmer did all the work. At harvest time, the landowner took 50% or more of the crops. But here's the really messed up part: sharecroppers had to buy supplies on credit with interest rates going up to 70%. They literally could never make enough money to break even, so families stayed trapped in debt for generations. The videos called it "slavery by another name" and I totally see why now.

There was this brief period called Reconstruction from 1865 to 1877 where things looked promising. The 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments were passed, and over 2,000 Black officials got elected to government positions. But after 1877 everything fell apart with Jim Crow laws, poll taxes, and violence that basically eliminated Black voting in the South by 1900.

Great Migration Chicago 1920s
This led to the Great Migration where 6 million African Americans moved north and west between 1916 and 1970. They were escaping sharecropping poverty and racial violence, looking for factory jobs that opened up during WWI and WWII. Cities like Chicago, Detroit, and New York saw huge population increases. This migration created amazing cultural movements like the Harlem Renaissance and gave African Americans more political power, even though they still faced housing descrimination and race riots.


Learning about leaders like Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. Du Bois was interesting too because they had completely different approaches to advancement.

Disclaimer: I used ai to summarize my notes and help me create a blog post. 

Tuesday, October 21, 2025

Benjamin Wade: "The Man Who Almost Changed History"

Portrait of Benjamin Wade

 

Benjamin Wade: The Abolitionist Who Fought Slavery at Every Turn

Benjamin Franklin Wade didn't just oppose slavery—he made it his life's mission to destroy it. From his earliest days in politics through the Civil War and Reconstruction, Wade never wavered in his conviction that slavery was a moral evil that had to be eliminated completely.



                                                                                             

Early Anti-Slavery Advocacy

Photo of Library of Congress
Wade's partnership with Joshua Giddings, a prominent anti-slavery advocate, shaped his political identity from the start. In 1831, the two lawyers joined forces in Jefferson, Ohio, and Wade absorbed Giddings' fierce abolitionist principles. When Wade entered the Ohio State Senate in 1837, he immediately went to work trying to repeal the Black Codes that restricted African American rights. His determined anti-slavery stand cost him reelection in 1839, but he won another term in 1841.

                                                                             
                                                                  

Fighting Slavery in Washington

Wade arrived in the U.S. Senate in 1851 as an uncompromising foe of slavery expansion. He vehemently opposed the Fugitive Slave Act, which forced Northern states to return escaped slaves to their owners. When the Kansas-Nebraska Act passed in 1854, opening western territories to slavery, Wade was so incensed that he left the Whig Party and helped organize the Republican Party in Ohio.

Wade's opposition to slavery wasn't just rhetorical—he was willing to fight physically if necessary. After a Southern senator witnessed and approved an assault on abolitionist Charles Sumner, Wade challenged Southern senators to personal combat. He, Zachariah Chandler, and Simon Cameron made a pact to respond to any insult from a Southerner with a duel challenge.

Wartime Action Against Slavery

When the Civil War began, Wade used his position as chairman of the Committee on Territories to abolish slavery in all federal territories in 1862. This was a critical step toward total emancipation. He also helped pass the Homestead Act of 1862, which provided land to settlers and undermined the plantation system.

Wade was furious with Lincoln's cautious approach to slavery. In September 1861, he privately wrote that Lincoln's views on slavery "could only come of one born of poor white trash and educated in a slave State." He was especially angry when Lincoln delayed recruiting Black soldiers into the Union Army. Wade advocated for the immediate emancipation and arming of enslaved people, as well as the execution of Confederate leaders and confiscation of their property.

The Wade-Davis Bill

Wade's most significant legislative effort to reshape the post-slavery South was the Wade-Davis Bill of 1864. Co-authored with Representative Henry Winter Davis, the bill demanded complete abolition of slavery and required Confederate states to give Black men the right to vote before being readmitted to the Union. The legislation called for far stricter conditions than Lincoln's lenient "Ten Percent Plan." While the bill passed both houses of Congress, Lincoln pocket-vetoed it, preferring his more moderate approach.

Fighting for Freedmen's Rights

Wade didn't stop fighting after slavery ended. He supported the Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights Bills, successfully extending civil rights protections to the District of Columbia. He was a strong advocate for the Fourteenth Amendment, which granted citizenship and equal protection to formerly enslaved people. Wade also pushed for Nebraska and Kansas statehood, strengthening the Republican majority in Congress.

When Andrew Johnson became president and pursued lenient reconstruction policies, Wade became his harshest critic. He argued that Johnson represented "the tyrannical slave power" and accused him of being "the lineal successor of John C. Calhoun and Jefferson Davis." Wade's vision for reconstruction included both economic and social transformation of the South through free labor, where Black and white Americans would "finally occupy a platform according to their merits."

A Lasting Legacy

Wade remained bitter about the betrayal of Reconstruction principles until his death. When President Hayes withdrew federal troops from the South in 1877, Wade wrote that he felt "indignation and a bitterness of soul that I never felt before." He declared that "to have emancipated these people and then to leave them unprotected would be a crime as infamous as to have reduced them to slavery once they are free."

Benjamin Wade died on March 2, 1878, having devoted his entire political career to abolishing slavery and securing rights for African Americans. His uncompromising stance cost him politically, but placed him on the right side of history.


Disclaimer: I used Claude AI for my information and research and added pictures.