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John Neely Bryan Leadership in trying to overturn African American Civil Rights With American victory in the War of the Rebellion over the Confederacy secured with the surrender of Gen. Robert E. Lee on April 9, 1865, many Republicans hoped that political rights could be secured for the newly freed African American slaves. However, on April 15, 1965 Abraham Lincoln was assassinated and Vice-President Andrew Johnson became president. Andrew Johnson was a vile racist and engaged on a program of restoring white supremacy and the former Confederates to power in the seceded states and block aid to the newly freed slaves as well as opposing civil rights of any types for African Americans. In response, starting with the 39th Congress, Dec. 1865, Congressional Republicans started a program to implement an effective program to aid African Americans called Congressional Reconstruction or Radical Reconstruction. It was called Radical Reconstruction since to most white Americans actually giving African Americans civil rights seemed radical. This involved overriding the vetoes of Andrew Johnson and attempting to oust him from office.1 The failure to impeach Andrew Johnson is one of the great disasters in the history of race in American history. John F. Kennedy’s book, “Profiles in Courage,” in which some Republicans are heroes for voting against impeachment is a white supremacist text, and the Kennedy family should realize it. Andrew Johnson in order to sustain his program of restoring white supremacy to the former slave states and to ensure his re-election as president attempted for form a new political party of Democrats and more conservative and racist Republicans. In February 1866 his supporters organized a National Union Club. On June 11, 1866 he met with supporters and committed his own money to forming a new party with a National Union Convention. On June 25, 1866 the call for the convention to be held on August 14, 1866 in Philadelphia.2
Two good sources of information about Reconstruction are “Reconstruction: America’s Unfinished Revolution,” by Eric Foner, Harper & Row, New York, 1988 and the shorter and more recent book, “The Wars of Reconstruction,” by Douglas R. Egerton, Bloomsbury Press, New York, 2014. 2 Nichols, Roy, F., “A Great Party Which Might Have Been Born in Philadelphia,” The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, Vol. 57 No. 4 (1933) pp. 359-374, https://www.jstor.org/stable/20086848, dates given on pages 361-363. Nichols was a white supremacist; the article was written in 1933. This was the best source I could find in JSTOR. 1