It Affected because they had no home
Model tenements
i'm pretty sure that poor white farmers were one "group" of people that supported the populist party. you may want to double check.
The rich white kids went to school. The poor white children could not afford to go to school. Black folks went to separate school for lesser black people in the community.
During Reconstruction, poll taxes were implemented primarily as a means to disenfranchise African American voters and, in some cases, poor white voters. These taxes required individuals to pay a fee in order to vote, which effectively limited access to the electoral process for those who could not afford to pay. The practice was rooted in the broader goals of white supremacist groups and Southern lawmakers to maintain control over the political landscape following the Civil War and the abolition of slavery. Ultimately, poll taxes became symbolic of systemic racism and were later outlawed by the 24th Amendment and the Supreme Court in the 1960s.
people who are rich in money and poor in happiness
poor white people, who did not even own slaves, it was the plantation owner who did.
Andrew Johnson
Andrew Johnson
Sounds like Bedford Forrest.
Mostly poor white people, along with some rich white ones as well. I am sure their was some black people aboard, but the vast majority were white.
white
White Man's Burden
Southern people responded to Reconstruction with a mix of resistance and adaptation. Many white Southerners opposed the changes brought by Reconstruction, leading to the rise of groups like the Ku Klux Klan, which sought to maintain white supremacy and undermine African American rights. Others engaged in the political process, while many poor whites and freedmen found common ground in sharecropping arrangements. Overall, the period was marked by significant tension and conflict as Southern society grappled with the implications of emancipation and federal intervention.
only if you sit with poor posture
people cannot feed their family
The Freedmen's Bureau was established in 1865 to provide relief for all poor people, both Black and white, in the South following the Civil War. Its primary mission was to assist formerly enslaved individuals in transitioning to freedom, but it also offered support to impoverished white families. The Bureau provided food, housing, medical care, and education, and aimed to facilitate the integration of freed people into society. Despite facing significant challenges and opposition, it played a crucial role in the Reconstruction era.
What would it be like to live in the south as a freedman during Reconstruction?