That most Northerners were not fervently anti-slavery.
African Americans faced the loss of progress they had gained.
Slavery ended. But both the North and the South (although to a lesser extent for the North) were not happy with this descision. Although African Americans were free, they still weren't treated with all of the rights that the Constitution gives them. In fact, there were several acts of discrimination against the African Americans, ranging from violent mobs protesting to not excepting Blacks into the army.
I don't think the south recruited them but the North recruited African Americans to win the war against the south to make the slaves free.
It was a flow of African Americans moving from the South to the North.
Completely Destroy Them then especially the African Americans feared that slavery would still continue
the south, where the Jim crow laws were in effect
Why do you think that discrimination against free African Americans was harsher in the South than in the North?
Yes
Because if you learned about the discrimination they faced in the north, it might cause you to question the ideas that the war was all about slavery, or that the south was peopled exclusively by evil slave-drivers. See related link below for information they don't bother to relate in school.
prejedice and discrimination
African-Americans moved north for increased job opportunities as well as a decrease in prejudice and social pressures.
African-Americans who lived in the North between 1865 and 1900 generally faced wretched living conditions.
African Americans faced the loss of progress they had gained.
Race relations in the North could vary depending on the specific location and time period, but generally, there was less overt segregation and discrimination compared to the South. However, racism still existed in the form of housing discrimination, job inequalities, and social segregation. African Americans in the North still faced systemic challenges and unequal opportunities in many aspects of life despite a less codified system of segregation.
No. African Americans were from Africa, which is southeast of America.
Feed black people faced discrimination and limited opportunities in Northern cities. While the North did not have slavery, there was still a great amount or racism and prejudice.
In the Great Migration, which took place in 1910-1930, millions of African Americans "migrated" to the Midwest, Northeast, and West of the United States from Southern states such as Mississippi, Alabama, and Louisiana. A second movement -- New Great Migration -- has been occurring since 1965 and is essentially the reverse of the Great Migration, with African Americans moving to the "New South" where job growth exceeded that of the North and racism/discrimination has abated.