Union Soldiers were sent to enforce the right
of black men to vote
Union soldiers were sent to the South to maintain order and enforce reconstruction laws after the Civil War. They were tasked with overseeing the transition of the former Confederate states back into the Union and ensuring civil rights for newly freed African Americans.
Northern Soldiers.
Union Soldiers were sent to enforce the right of black men to vote
To help end slavery
the government sent the troops to keep order their were to much violence in the south against the African Americans so the governmernt sent them down.
it was 1947
1962.
Soldiers from the United States were sent to South Vietnam to support the government and combat the communist insurgency during the Vietnam War.
The period after the Civil War, 1865 - 1877, was called the Reconstruction period. Abraham Lincoln started planning for the reconstruction of the South during the Civil War as Union soldiers occupied huge areas of the South.
The South rejoined the union after reconstruction.
Most soldiers went back home to their families and farms. Some went west. A smaller number remained in the Army to occupy the South during Reconstruction.
Union troops, specifically military officials, were sent to the South during the Civil War to maintain order and enforce Reconstruction laws. These troops sought to uphold the authority of the federal government and facilitate the transition of the Southern states back into the Union.