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Essay On Segregation After The Civil War

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Segregation after the Civil War In 1865, President Abraham Lincoln pushed the Thirteenth Amendment through Congress, effectively freeing any remaining slaves throughout the country. The Fourteenth Amendment also passed in 1865, granted citizenship to all former slaves who were naturalized or born in the United States. (pbs.com) These changes were drastic and immediate but that did not mean that African- Americans were accepted into communities overnight. African-Americans faced a new set of challenges when segregation became the new normal of their daily lives. Despite the changes to the Constitution that should have made them equal in the eyes of the law, African-Americans were regarded by many as second-class citizens and they were treated as such. They faced new daily life challenges, legislation that kept them separate from whites in the eyes of the law, and threats of violence from …show more content…

Its main goal was to maintain a resistance to the Republican Party’s Reconstruction-era policies that were “aimed at establishing political and economic equality for blacks.” (history.com) Angered by what they saw as Presidents Johnson’s leniency towards the Southern states, the more radical members of the Republican Party in Congress passed the Reconstruction Act even over the presidential veto. This act divided the South into five military districts and required each state to approve the Fourteenth Amendment. In response, the KKK took aim at any political gains made by African-Americans by wins throughout state legislatures. Unfortunately, all of their methods were not through legal channels as blacks were often subjected to violence at the hands of Klan members. They targeted Republican voters regardless of their race and white supremacy gradually reasserted its hold and “by the end of 1876; the entire South was under Democratic control once again.”

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