Carpetbaggers were unpopular in the South primarily because they were perceived as opportunistic outsiders who moved to the region after the Civil War to exploit its economic and political instability. Many Southern whites viewed them as corrupt and self-serving, believing they sought to profit from the plight of the Reconstruction-era South. Additionally, their association with the Republican Party and efforts to promote civil rights for newly freed African Americans fueled resentment among many white Southerners who opposed these changes. This combination of perceived exploitation and political opposition contributed to their unpopularity.
All if the above (Apex)
Freedmen, Scalawags, And Carpet-Baggers
Carpet baggers
Carpetbaggers was a name given to people who moved from the North to the South. Many purchased or leased land and became wealthy.
The term "Carpet Bagger" was derived from the Northerners who came into the South after the Civil War during the Reconstruction era, believed to have come to the South for private profits. While "scalawag" was a negative term used against White Southerners by other White Southerners, stating they are in support of Reconstruction for private gain.
The south after the civil war
because there was alot to offer them
Carpet baggers never were popular because they came into the south that was recovering from the war and were northern . They carried a carpet type bag so were called carpet baggers. They bought land and buildings for pennies because people needed the money.
All if the above (Apex)
Freedmen, Scalawags, And Carpet-Baggers
Carpet baggers
Carpet baggers'
they were
Carpet baggers
I think it was + carpet baggers + .
Carpet Baggers
After the Civil War they were known as carpet-baggers.