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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
6 pages in length. The political, social and economic conditions after the Civil War defined the goals for Reconstruction. These goals were essentially to rebuild the South's economy on the basis of free labor, readmitting the Southern states within the Union, and integrating the African Americans into the social fabric of American society. When the Reconstruction Period arrived, it looked as though blacks were going to gain even more rights alongside the emancipation that had already taken place; however, it actually proved to represent a time of much disappointment for many. The writer briefly reviews the history of racial plight, including the Reconstruction, Dred Scott, Jim Crow, Black Codes, 13th and 14th Amendments, Plessy v Ferguson and Martin Luther King, Jr. Bibliography lists 9 sources.
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6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCtreat.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
were essentially to rebuild the Souths economy on the basis of free labor, readmitting the Southern states within the Union, and integrating the African Americans into the social fabric of
American society. When the Reconstruction Period arrived, it looked as though blacks were going to gain even more rights alongside the emancipation that had already taken place; however, it
actually proved to represent a time "of much disappointment" (Kirkendale, 2002) for many. It was not so much that laws were not in place by which to protect blacks
from the injustices once faced, but the whites often ignored those laws. The provisions, as they called them, were meant to provide blacks with the ability to perform the
same as others, without the restrictions of being slaves. However, it appeared that this aspect put the fear of God into many white folks, inasmuch as they were afraid
that the four million slaves who became liberated would revolt against them. In truth, all the blacks wanted was their freedom, but because
the whites were too intimidated to allow what was inherently theirs to begin with, they established yet another set of rules that rendered blacks as second class citizens. After
the Civil War, blacks earned the long-awaited right to vote and even hold office. Some left the plantations but many became sharecroppers; it was not long before a new
black community began to take shape. But white backlash soon began, and the black population lost most of what they had gained at the end of the war.
While the opportunities to further democratic process been finally achieved, they were only a temporary fix for the blacks. The bitterness between whites and blacks could be cut with
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