The huge profits of the cotton trade
No and if they did they would go to jail
They would go to canada, a much nicer place than the us
he made a speech so blacks and whites would be equal
yes, because if he hadn't made the speech blacks and whites would still be segragated and blacks would still be treated poorly.
martin told the blacks that they would no longer ride the bus until they treated them as equal as the whites
The agreement was that Southern blacks would work meekly and submit to white political rule, while Southern whites guaranteed that blacks would receive basic education and due process in law.
Blacks consider blacks sexier and whites consider whites sexier.In a natural environment Races would not mix.It is goes against what we are hardwired to do.Cheers.
Southern whites feared that freed blacks would seek revenge for past treatment as slaves.
Southern whites feared that freed blacks would seek revenge for past treatment as slaves.
Booker t washington
whites...!!
No and if they did they would go to jail
yes. In South Africa there was an system to separate blacks from whites. they had separate areas in which they would do the same thing but one place was for blacks another for whites. e.g a tap there would be a wall separating two areas a tap for blacks a tap for whites. this was called the "apartheid" system.
yes , or we would be separating blacks from the whites again.
This question would be easier to answer with more clarification on who "he" is.
The whites did go to jail. They would go t jail of talking to the slaves.
Racist Southern whites, who had just been forced by the Union to free their slaves, enacted the Black Codes to maintain the inferior status of Blacks in the South. (Although some northern states had equally racist laws on the books.) Whites were afraid that newly-freed Blacks would compete for jobs with whites, vote whites out of political offices, and own firearms. In other words, have the same rights as every free person in the rest of the united States. Thus the Black Codes were enacted to render Blacks inferior in employment, ownership of property, voting, and every other social and economic status that freed men could have.