No, after the Confederate States of America lost the civil war, there were no more Confederates. They lost the war.
It was known as Reconstruction.
During Reconstruction, the federal government, specifically the Union Army and federal officials, enforced the laws in the South. This was done to ensure that the newly implemented policies, such as the Reconstruction Amendments and civil rights laws, were upheld in the region.
reconsruction
Cotton was the main cash crop of the South during the Reconstruction Era.
yes
letting african american men vote
During Reconstruction, ex-Confederates aimed to restore their political power and social order in the South, seeking to reinstate white supremacy and undermine the rights of freed African Americans. They sought to diminish the influence of the federal government in Southern affairs and promote local control, often through the establishment of discriminatory laws like Black Codes. Additionally, many ex-Confederates worked to regain economic stability and maintain their previous agricultural practices, including the use of sharecropping, which often exploited Black labor. Ultimately, their efforts contributed to the resistance against Reconstruction policies and the eventual establishment of Jim Crow laws.
Carpetbagger
The federal governments plan to reform the South was by reconstruction. This was an attempt to rebuild and better the South.
Mississippi and South Carolina
Reconstruction means rebuilding. During the Civil War, much of the South was destroyed. Reconstruction was rebuilding AFTER the war- both physical rebuilding, and rebuilding the government in the former Confederate States.
the government sent the troops to keep order their were to much violence in the south against the African Americans so the governmernt sent them down.