Reconstruction finally came to an official end as part of a compromise involving the southern states. Rutherford B. Hayes removed troops in 1877.
After, coming to a stalemate, They finally came to a cease-fire agreement in 1953.
African Americans were finally able to recieve an education.
slaves could be imported for twenty years
I'm pretty sure that's Congressional Reconstruction.... I'm not positive though...
It's actually the Three-Fifths Compromise. Most delegates from the slave-holding States argued that slaves should be counted. Most northerners took the opposing view. Finally, the Framers decided on the 3/5ths Compromise.
none of the above.
It was the great compromise
the Reconstruction Era has two uses; the first covers the entire nation in the period 1865-1877 following theCivil War; the second one, used in this article, covers the transformation of the Southern United States from 1863 to 1877, with the reconstruction of state and society in the former Confederacy. Three amendments to the Constitution affected the entire nation. In the different states, Reconstruction began and ended at different times; federal Reconstruction policies were finally abandoned with the Compromise of 1877.[1]Reconstruction policies were debated in the North when the war began, and commenced in earnest after the Emancipation Proclamation, issued on January 1, 1863. Reconstruction policies were implemented when a Confederate state came under the control of the Union Army
population in the House and equality in the Senate.
Nothing
After, coming to a stalemate, They finally came to a cease-fire agreement in 1953.
The civil war was not called Reconstruction. Recontruction happened after the war was over and lasted until 1877 when the Union soldiers finally left the last states that were being reconstructed from the war.
African Americans were finally able to recieve an education.
Hayes withdrew the last federal troops from the South thereby ending Reconstruction.
Missouri Compromise
slaves could be imported for twenty years
I'm pretty sure that's Congressional Reconstruction.... I'm not positive though...