The Southern states kept African Americans from gaining political power by denying them an education. They also passed laws to keep them down. They were not allowed to own property and most of them could not read or write.
The Southern states kept African Americans from gaining political power by denying them an education. They also passed laws to keep them down. They were not allowed to own property and most of them could not read or write.
Southern whites sought to stop African Americans from gaining rights and power primarily to maintain their social, economic, and political dominance following the Civil War and Reconstruction. They feared that empowering African Americans would threaten their established way of life, which was built on racial hierarchy and exploitation. This led to the enactment of discriminatory laws, violence, and intimidation, including the rise of groups like the Ku Klux Klan, aimed at suppressing African American rights and ensuring white supremacy.
Jim Crow laws and discrimination prevented African Americans from voting and having civil rights.
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They instituted black codes to restrict African American rights.
Most African nations were faced with the challenged of gaining legitimacy. There was also the challenge of handing over power in a smooth and effective transition.
Some of the immediate effects of American reconstruction were the end of slavery, a change of government in the South to disallow Confederate politicians, and the drop of the southern economy because of the lack of slave labor. Longer-term effects included African-Americans gaining the right to vote, long-lasting racial tensions, and the growth of communities that had mostly or all African-Americans.
Umm.. the french/ spanish help... all the battles and turning points... the political cartoons and the engraving of the boston massacre...
federalism
federalism
African slave sold in the west indies and after gaining freedom abolitionist and writer in england?
The most direct civil rights tactic responsible for African Americans gaining equal access to the ballot box in southern states during the 20th century was the use of grassroots voter registration drives, particularly in the 1960s. Organizations like the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) mobilized communities to challenge discriminatory practices such as literacy tests and poll taxes. Additionally, the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which prohibited racial discrimination in voting, was a pivotal legislative outcome of these efforts, dramatically increasing voter registration and participation among African Americans in the South.