Reconstruction always destroys everything in the introduction So after the end of the Civil War, the United States had to reassemble the number of former slaves and the number of rebels returned to the country, a challenge we are likely to face, unless Abraham Lincoln was killed and left Andrew. Thus, Lincoln's post-war vision was to facilitate reconciliation and reconciliation, and Andrew Johnson's Reconstruction policy was that the South did not have the right to isolate itself from the beginning. in South Africa they despised him, AND he was also a racist who did not think that black people should play a role in Reconstruction.
those new governments looked suspiciously like the government of the old organizations that had replaced them. And what changed for those who were slaves? Somehow, though, too. For example, the universities of Fiske and Howard were established, as well as many primary and secondary schools, thanks to part of The Freedman's Bureau, which lasted until 1870, but had the power to separate the occupied and abandoned land of former slaves. And this was very important because for many slaves, land ownership was the key to freedom, and many felt that they had been promised land by the Union Army. According to General Sherman's Field Order 15, it promised to distribute 40 acres of land to former slaves. But that did not happen, either through Freedman's Bureau or elsewhere. Instead, President Johnson ordered the entire land to be returned to its former owners. So the South remained mostly agricultural and the same people with the same land, and in the end, we ended up being farmed. Let's go to the Thought of Thought. The joint investment program replaced slavery in many places throughout the South. Landowners would provide housing for shareholders - no, Thought Bubble, not so good.
When the tools and seeds, and then the traders receive, they get this, half of their yield — usually between a third and a half, and the value of that crop is usually set by the landlord. The liberated blacks were able to control their work, and the landowners found hard workers who could not easily move, because they had little opportunity to save money and make large investments, such as land or tools. By the late 1860's, poor white farmers were also plowing — in fact, during the Great Depression, most farmers were white. And although co-farming was not slavery, it resulted in a quasi-serfdom binding workers on land that was not theirs - more or less contrary to Jefferson's view of a small, independent farmer. Thus, the Republicans in Congress. They were not happy that this rebuilt south looked like the south before the Civil War, so they led the rebuilding after 1867. The Radical Republicans recognized that the war was a struggle for equal rights and sought to strengthen the national government. . Few were as strong as Thaddeus “Tommy Lee Jones” Stephens who wanted to take the land from Southern investors and give it to former slaves, but the Republicans were powerful enough to pass the Bill of Rights, which defined the people. was born in the United States as a citizen and established national equality before the law regardless of race.
Andrew Johnson immediately abolished the law, saying that trying to protect the rights of African Americans was tantamount to discriminating against white people, which angered Republicans so much that Congress did something unprecedented in American history. They overthrew the President's veto by a2 / 3rds and the Bill of Rights became law. Congress therefore had a negative effect and decided to amend the Constitution by amendment 14, which defines nationalism, guarantees equal protection, and extends the Bill of Rights in all provinces (genre). The amendment probably did not have the support of the Democratic Alliance, but we also did not need it, as there were probably no Democrats in Congress because the ANC had refused to seat all "white" government representatives who were backed by Johnson. And that is how we have found the 14th amendment, which is undoubtedly the most important of all the Constitution. Thanks, Bubble Thoughts. Oh, straight to the mysterious document today? All right. The rules here are simple. I think the author of the Mystery Text and try not to panic. All right, let's see what we have today. Episode 1. An ordained judge of the police parish of St. Landry, That no negro person shall be permitted to pass within specified limits without written permission from his or her employer. Episode 4 ... . All negro are required to be a regular service of a white person, or former owner, who will be held responsible for that person's conduct.
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