After Reconstruction ended in 1877, the South experienced the rise of Jim Crow laws, which enforced racial segregation and disenfranchised African Americans through measures like literacy tests and poll taxes. White supremacist groups, such as the Ku Klux Klan, gained power, using violence and intimidation to maintain white dominance. The economic conditions for many African Americans deteriorated, as sharecropping and tenant farming became prevalent, trapping them in cycles of poverty. Overall, this period marked a significant regression in civil rights and social progress for Black Southerners.
The black codes started and ended in the process of the Reconstruction.
1877
Reconstruction was only partially successful for a short time. When reconstruction ended, much of the south returned to its racist ways. It remained for the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s to complete the work that might have been accomplished with Reconstruction.
Racism continued and blacks still werent treated as equalls, but later on came Martin Luther and that era ended it all.
Radical rule in the South ended when Rutherford B. Hayes was elected in 1876. President Hayes helped with the last efforts of the Reconstruction after the Civil War ended.
Compromise of 1877
Wade Hampton III was governor in 1877, the year that reconstruction is generally considered to have ended.
federal intervention ended in the south
Democrats
The black codes started and ended in the process of the Reconstruction.
1877
federal intervention ended in the south
federal intervention ended in the south
federal intervention ended in the south
Hayes withdrew the troops federal troops from the South
The military occupation of the South by the Federal Troops and the Reconstruction.
Democrats