it was failing because the freedmen were parting the money that they made with working with white men but they also had to pay rent to the owner of the farm so the freedmen made no moneymade no money
It allowed southern children to get an education, but segregation made it expensive.
rejoined
why were freedmen eager to attend the schools created by the freedmens bureau during reconstruction
Scalawags
Hurtful
Landowners
Sharecropping and tenant farming both emerged as labor systems in the South after the Civil War and Reconstruction. Both systems involved individuals working on land owned by others in exchange for a share of the crops produced. The laborers in these systems typically faced economic struggles and limited autonomy.
During Reconstruction, social adjustments in the South included the abolition of slavery, the enfranchisement of African Americans, and the attempt to rebuild the region's infrastructure and economy. Economically, the South faced challenges such as land redistribution, labor shortages, and the need for new systems of labor and agriculture. The region also experienced economic devastation from the Civil War and the end of the plantation system, leading to a period of adjustment and reconstruction.
13 14 15 amendments Sharecropping All the states back into the US
sharecropping
ex slaves were sharecropping. Bang bang.
Its failure to provide blacks with farm property of their own
one way reconstruction was a failure is that the freedman bureau burn down the blacks school, meaning no freedom what so ever for the blacks.
Reconstruction was indeed a failure, the criteria was not met.
WELL RECONSTRUCTION WAS BOTH GOOD AND BAD FOR THE COUNTRY. WHAT WAS GOOD ABOUT RECONSTRUCTION WAS THE FREEDMANS BUERAU. WHAT WAS BAD WAS THE BLACK CODES, JIM CROW LAWS, SHARECROPPING, AND ALL THAT STUFF
A black sharecropper might evaluate reconstruction negatively as promises of land ownership and economic opportunities were not fully realized. The rise of sharecropping perpetuated economic dependency and limited social mobility for many black individuals, reinforcing systemic racial inequalities. The failure to address racial discrimination and protect civil rights further compounded the challenges faced by black sharecroppers during this period.
The South reverted to its racist ways following Reconstruction.