Actually, it doesn't make sense that they were hated. Northerners who moved south after the civil war were called "carpetbaggers" by critics who claimed they carried all their things in one bag. Actually, most were educated people, business and political leaders, northern blacks, and former soldiers. They sought to invest in the ruined southern lands and form partnerships with planters. Sometimes they met with violence, ostracism or derision because of their radical views, but most southern capital starved people accepted them to help rebuild their economy. Many were also active in political and social reform and in 1867 they won the most southern political offices. They wanted to modernize the southern economy through railroads and other internal building.
Southerners hated carpetbaggers for one main reason: they profited from their misfortune. While the south was struggling with reconstruction, the carpetbaggers were milking the bad situation at the south's expense... Current challenges this notion by proclaiming that, because of reconstruction, the South was new and open land to explore for northerners who before were so opposed to slavery as to ever set foot in southern territory. The fact that they were making a quick buck... well they also have families to feed! If they make a living off of selling property from a "nation" which was currently under construction, then so be it. The southerners were simply pissy because they lost and slavery is abolished. As they continually see "carpetbaggers" and "scallawags" making a living off of what they feel is rightfully theirs, they are bound to be miffed.
Carpetbaggers and scalawags were the names given to Northerners who traveled to the South to try to influence how the defeated states were run. to make money, some wanted to run for high political office.
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.
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.
What point did B. Wells make about lynching in the south?
The southerners hated carpetbaggers because they were notherners who moved to the south after the Civil War. Southerners hated scalawags because they supported reconstruction in the south after the war.
Carpetbaggers
dishonest carpetbaggers went south to make money
Because the south was trying to make peace with the north and the carpetbaggers and Scalawags were betraying their own states and believed in slavery and the north was not trusting the south even though it was the carpetbaggers and scalawags causing the problemthere ya go!Kayla^whoever wrote this is way wrong.Many of the scalawags and carpetbaggers shared the same vision of rebuilding and upgrading the southern economy and society. They created public school systems, establishing the University of Arkansas. They also helped make the railroads connect!
Southerners hated carpetbaggers for one main reason: they profited from their misfortune. While the south was struggling with reconstruction, the carpetbaggers were milking the bad situation at the south's expense... Current challenges this notion by proclaiming that, because of reconstruction, the South was new and open land to explore for northerners who before were so opposed to slavery as to ever set foot in southern territory. The fact that they were making a quick buck... well they also have families to feed! If they make a living off of selling property from a "nation" which was currently under construction, then so be it. The southerners were simply pissy because they lost and slavery is abolished. As they continually see "carpetbaggers" and "scallawags" making a living off of what they feel is rightfully theirs, they are bound to be miffed.
The Southerners called them Carpetbaggers, because they usually carried Gladstone bags made with carpet material.
carpetbaggers.Northerners going south for various reasons, usually to make money or political reasons, often carried their belongings in bags made of carpet like material. They were referred to as carpetbaggers.
Carpetbaggers and scalawags were the names given to Northerners who traveled to the South to try to influence how the defeated states were run. to make money, some wanted to run for high political office.
Carpetbaggers .
The South didn't want or need the northern Carpetbaggers or Scalawags to come down here and attempt to make money out of the devastation of the South. They could call it reconstruction, but they were corrupt people out to make a buck for themselves.
The term "carpetbaggers" was used to refer to Northerners who went South after the Civil War, often to make a profit or to participate in Reconstruction efforts. It was not typically used to refer to liberated slaves. Freed slaves were more commonly referred to as freedmen or emancipated individuals.
It can be any many but make the question easier for some people like be specific