black codes African American to vote,own guns, or severe injuries
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The Black Codes were enacted after the establishment of the Freedmen's Bureau. The Freedmen's Bureau was created in March 1865, during the Reconstruction era, to assist formerly enslaved people and impoverished whites in the South. The Black Codes, however, were adopted in late 1865 and into 1866 by Southern states to restrict the rights and freedoms of African Americans.
Not in American slavery, although laws differ in other places and times. There was some protection for a slave from people other than his master, however- for example, if someone murdered a slave, the murderer had to recompense the master for the value/price of the slave. That wasn't much of a consolation for the slave, of course.
Because blacks were brought to this country as slaves, and even though the Emancipation Proclamation ended slavery, the Civil Rights movement had to happen before whites and authorities were able to accept them as equals.
Mose Wright helped with the Civil Rights Movement. The civil rights movement helped give blacks equal rights as whites.
6,100,000 Southern people owned no slaves.
Southern whites were reluctant to emancipate their slaves because slaves were their livelihood. Slaves did all the dirty work such as farming and house hold chores.
64%
Around 75% of southern whites owned fewer than five slaves. The majority of white southerners owned no slaves at all, as slaves were primarily held by a small percentage of wealthy plantation owners.
25% of southern white families owned slaves in 1860
Whites without slaves.(50%)
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Poor southern whites fought to defend many things. These people fought to keep their land, their rights, and often their workers.
Of all the slaves owned forty-nine percent owned fewer than 5 slaves. Only five percent of Southern whites lived in a home that owned slaves. Which equals out to twenty-five percent of whites owned slaves.
South Carolina and Mississippi.
they thought freed slaves would seek revenge.
Most Southern whites, even if they didn't own slaves themselves, supported the slave system because they believed it reinforced their social status and economic well-being. They also perceived slaves as essential to the Southern economy and saw slavery as a fundamental part of their way of life and culture. Additionally, many non-slaveholding whites subscribed to the racial hierarchy that justified and maintained the institution of slavery.