Chapter 12 Section 2
Ku Klux Klan
A group of white supremacist extremists
Scalawag
A person who behaves badly but in an amusingly mischievous rather than harmful way; a rascal.
Tenant Farming
A person who farms rented land.
Carpetbagger
A political candidate who seeks election in an area where they have no local connections.
Sharecropping
A tenant farmer who gives a part of each crop as rent.
remaking the southern economy
At first it was a shaky stat but the south slowly but shortly rebuilt
African Americans use political power
Black helped put radical republicans in the south Southern black men were now voters
Schools and churches
Blacks started to establish churches and schools in there community's
Freed people build communities
Blacks started to make economic relationships with the government
Scalawags and carpetbaggers take part in southern politics
Carpet baggers a scallywags were taking advantage of the post-civil war destruction by posing as workers getting paid first than leaving and buying property at low prices
Republican governments bring change
In 1870 the confederate states requirements under the radical reconstruction
Blanch K Bruce
• Born a slave, learned to read from his owner's son. • Moved to Missouri and ran a school for black children • Went to Oberlin College in Ohio • Went to South Mississippi and became a prosperous landowner • He was elected for several local political positions • Was later elected United State Senate
Systems for sharing that land
Land started being disputed and land owners did not have enough money to buy more land
Share-Tenancy
One who operates a farm owned by another, pays a share of the crop as rent, and provides labor, power and implements, and usually his share of seed and fertilizer
Successes and failures result
Republicans did not support woman's suffrage Reconstruction in the south made it able for woman to get job they previously couldn't
The ku klux klan sprikes back
Whites became upset with the free blacks and formed the ku klux klan to stop black from living in the south
Enforcement Acts
The Enforcement Acts were three bills passed by the United States Congress between 1870 and 1871. They were criminal codes which protected African-Americans' right to vote, to hold office, to serve on juries, and receive equal protection of laws.
Integration
The action or process of integrating; intense questioning
Segregation
The action or state of setting someone or something apart from other people or things or being set apart
The federal government responds
The government started to fight agents the kkk with the enforcement act