Causes And Effects Of Reconstruction

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Reconstruction Reconstruction was a time that defined what African Americans were to society and how they were accepted in the United States. Many reforms and amendments caused a difference in the lives of African-Americans for freedom and equality. The road to equality was difficult and many did not support what the government was trying to do. In my aftermath of reconstruction African- Americans still did not have full equality. In the beginning of the Reconstruction of the south, there were events that transpired that caused the federal government to redefine African- Americans in society. The first event was caused by the slaves being proclaimed free. Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation of 1863 originally freed the slaves, …show more content…

The explanation for the United States pulling away was for many reasons. Reconstruction had failed and consequently black equality went with the reconstruction. To start the new president Hayes did not agree with what was going on for reconstruction and took all the military out of the south (David Shi 537). After pulling out the troops the Republican organization fell. Many attempts of reconstruction were done and the energy to give African-Americans freedom was being pushed away by the south. Since the republican governments collapsed in the south the democratic white ruling was in power once again. Racial equality wasn’t able to be accepted by the masses and the southerners were finding every way they could to find a loophole to go against racial equality. After trying to reconstruct the south and the results and reactions being so poor the north lost interest in assisting. The Ku Klux Klan also contributed to the North’s lost interest. The Klan used terrorism to change political power in 1873 (David Shi 535). The Klan successfully changed the democratic votes in their favor to which republicans felt discouraged about the fate of the south. As stated by The New York Herold, “The North has got tired of the Negro” (David Shi 535). Without votes from the north for reconstruction and the republican rebellion, there was no way to move forward with racial equality at that time

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