they felt good because there were more blacks then whites
They felt good because the South is where the Blacks ( African Americans) live.
They felt good because the South is where the Blacks ( African Americans) live.
Southerners generally viewed the Freedmen's Bureau with suspicion and hostility. Many white Southerners resented the bureau's efforts to assist formerly enslaved people, seeing it as an infringement on their rights and a tool of federal overreach. The bureau's focus on promoting education and civil rights for African Americans was perceived as a threat to the social order that had existed prior to the Civil War. This antagonism contributed to ongoing tensions during the Reconstruction era.
They were mad about it.
White
Opinions among Southerners regarding the Freedmen's Bureau were largely divided. Many white Southerners opposed the Bureau, viewing it as an unwelcome federal intervention aimed at supporting formerly enslaved people and disrupting the social order of the South. They resented the Bureau's efforts to provide education, employment, and civil rights to freedmen. However, some Southerners, particularly those who recognized the need for a stable workforce and economic recovery, supported the Bureau's initiatives.
The Southerners did not feel good about the future of slavery
White Southerners resented the work of the Freedmans's Bureau. Many white southerners resented the aid offered by the Freedmen's Bureau. Lincoln's plan of reconstruction, however, was not based on trying to lay blame on the Southern states for starting the war. Rather it was a conciliatory effort based on the belief that the Confederate states had never left the Union.
Vell den, vets see, dey wur angreh.
Freedman's Bureau
The white Southerners do not like change. The Southerners are set in their own ways.
No