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Effects Of The Civil War In The 1960's

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The Civil War lead to a great deal of changes socially as well as politically within the American South. The defeat the Confederacy experienced after the Civil War brought about turmoil, such as increased racial strife, and African Americans were often blamed for the chaos the South underwent after losing the conflict. White supremacists were faced with the possibility of former slaves gaining certain privileges, such as the right to vote, and fought to maintain white superiority. Due to the frightening prospect of African American voters, several individuals within the South responded with anger and violence. However, African American males did receive voting rights, due to the 15th Amendment, which caused certain groups to respond with drastic measures to install fear within the African American population. Most of these measures, such as lynching, were legalized within the Jim Crow laws which kept African American populations living in the South suppressed under racist infrastructures. …show more content…

Throughout the 1960’s, the Civil Rights movement defied white supremacy and the supremacists who fought to uphold Jim Crow laws in the South. A famous example of a challenge to Southern racism would be Brown vs the Board of Education. After the Supreme Court ruled to de-segregate school systems, violence and resistance erupted in the South. Just like during Reconstruction, the federal government had to intervene to protect the rights of American citizens. This research paper will also observe current events, such as the removal of the Confederate Flag from the Capitol building in 2000 and later from the Capitol grounds in Columbia, South Carolina in 2015. These events, along with the public opinion in the 1960’s, demonstrate the feelings of resentment some individuals maintain towards African Americans for a war that was lost, are still preserved within the

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