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I'm not sure if there was ever an "official" reconstruction period. Generally, "Reconstruction" is applied to federal government policies applied to defeated Southern states as early as 1863. Historians generally agree that Reconstruction policies ended soon after the inauguration (following a razor-thin election) of Rutherford B. Hayes in 1877.
Actually reconstruction ended with the election of Hayes in 1877. The election was a tie and Hayes made a deal with the committee who decided the presidency. The deal was he would end reconstruction and this decision actually affected policy for the next 100 years. By ending reconstruction early the southern states were able to institute Jim Crow Laws which made discrimination an government policy. Without the early end to reconstruction the south may have been a different place and it took the 1964 Civil Rights act to overcome Jim Crow.
President Johnson's early ties to the south influence his treatment of African Americans in his Reconstruction plans because he wanted to punish the slaveholders. Because of this people thought Johnson would create a harch plan but instead he gave states control.
I am sorry but we can't answer because we don't know what the statements are.
Many leaders supported the enlightenment ideal of individual liberty, but they were also unwilling to demand an end to slavery.
He was president during the early part of reconstruction.
SCALAWAG was a post civil war, reconstruction era term of insult for a white southerner who supported reconstruction efforts. The word comes down through the English language with various meanings over time, such as "farm laborer", "disreputable fellow", "habitual jokster", and early definition uses it as "undersized or worthless animal".
it started in the early 1867s.
Answer this question… The Maori won legal equality early on but saw their rights taken away over time
Many women took a leading role in the reform movement
John Porter Hollis has written: 'The early period of Reconstruction in South Carolina' -- subject(s): Reconstruction (U.S. history, 1865-1877), South Carolina, Reconstruction
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Through the issuance of company stock