ResistanceMarch 2, 1867
Reconstruction Acts of 1867 Divide South into Military Districts
The Reconstruction Acts of 1867 divided the ten unreconstructed Southern states into five military districts, required new state constitutions guaranteeing Black male suffrage, and mandated ratification of the 14th Amendment as a condition of readmission. This produced the most democratic governments the South had yet seen: between 1868 and 1876, over 1,500 Black men held public office in the South including two U.S. senators and fourteen representatives. The Acts were passed over Johnson's vetoes and represented the high-water mark of federal commitment to Black civil rights in the 19th century.