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Carpetbaggers was the term often used to describe such people.
The people who came from the north after the Civil War to help the south regroup politically were called carpetbaggers. This referred to the bags they brought with them when they traveled from the north. In the early days, native southerners were not able to hold political positions. Over time, these northerners were seen as opportunists who came to make their fortunes at the expense of others. The term carpetbagger became a negative term for that reason.
The term "Carpet Bagger" was derived from the Northerners who came into the South after the Civil War during the Reconstruction era, believed to have come to the South for private profits. While "scalawag" was a negative term used against White Southerners by other White Southerners, stating they are in support of Reconstruction for private gain.
it is a time during the civil war that all the other people took other peoples things and did not think twice about it and didnt care who they hurt in the processe of doiing there crime full acts. Actually, this person is almost right, but he doesn't explain that much. The Carpetbaggers were northerners that came south after the civil war in a period called reconstruction and they bought property at fire-sale prices and sold it at regular price. The Southerners couldn't do anything about it because they had lost the war. The name "scalawag" was created for the carpetbaggers. Actually you are almost right. The term Scalawag was used to descibe southerners that agreed with what the Carpetbaggers did. That is the only problem that I saw in your explaination.
The term Antebellum South refers to the period before the start of the Civil War. The South had an agrarian economy that relied heavily on slave labor.
YANKEES ...
Carpetbaggers was the term often used to describe such people.
Carpetbaggers were northerners who migrated to the south in search of jobs after the civil war. The term carpetbagger was used to describe an outsider who comes to a locality where he does not belong in the hope of obtaining power or success. It was used to describe northerners trying to make their fortunes in the south following the civil war, for politicians who try to get elected in a riding where they have no ties with the longtime residents, and for sleazy traveling salesmen. The term originated during the 19th century, when travelers often used luggage made from carpets.
Carpetbaggers. They packed a few belongings into a carpet-bag, and headed South to exploit the low wages in a depressed region. Although they were within their legal rights, they were seen as an unpleasant and exploitative breed, so the name Carpetbagger remains a perjorative term.
The people who came from the north after the Civil War to help the south regroup politically were called carpetbaggers. This referred to the bags they brought with them when they traveled from the north. In the early days, native southerners were not able to hold political positions. Over time, these northerners were seen as opportunists who came to make their fortunes at the expense of others. The term carpetbagger became a negative term for that reason.
A derogatory term applied to Northerners who migrated south during the Reconstruction to take advantage of opportunities to advance their own fortunes by buying up land from desperate Southerners and by manipulating new black voters to obtain lucrative government contracts.
Carpetbaggers, often used pejoratively, was the term used for Northerners who came to the South to implement the policies of Reconstruction. They have been frequently accused of taking advantage of the political, economic and social upheaval in the South at that time.
The term "Carpet Bagger" was derived from the Northerners who came into the South after the Civil War during the Reconstruction era, believed to have come to the South for private profits. While "scalawag" was a negative term used against White Southerners by other White Southerners, stating they are in support of Reconstruction for private gain.
"Breakfast spell" was a term the Northerners used just prior to the Civil War in order to indicate the belief that any war with the South would be brief - just a slight interruption of one's breakfast. Of course, that was not the case.
White southerners who supported Reconstruction were referred to as "Scalawags", while northerners who came south to assist were called "Carpetbaggers,", an equally derisive term inferring they carried everything they owned in a carpetbag and could move quickly. Both groups traveled the South for their own personal economic gain.
scalawags. the northerners were referred to as carpetbaggers.
There is no US Civil War vessel named Damn Yankee. There is a musical named Damn Yankee. During the Civil War this term was meant in a derogatory fashion against northerners.