dsfdsf
In much of the country in the late nineteenth century, social tensions were defined in terms of rich versus poor, native-born versus immigrant, and worker versus capitalist. In the states of the former Confederacy, despite all the calls for a New South in the years after Reconstruction, tensions continued to center upon the relations between blacks and whites. Although a small percentage of African-Americans found work in the new iron foundries and steel mills, they were generally barred from the textile mills that grew into the region's major industry. Mill owners preferred to use white women and children rather than blacks, who were increasingly portrayed as lazy, ignorant, and shiftless. Consequently, the overwhelming majority of African-Americans were tied to the land as sharecroppers or tenant farmers. By 1900, segregation was institutionalized throughout the South, and the civil rights of blacks were sharply curtailed.
let me know if you have more trouble and ill help
ok thanks alot
i hate this class i like your help alot thanks very much im almost to the point of droping out like i said im 20 and in highschool due to issues in dah past
your 20?
but i said to myself never give up your gona make it i can do all things thorugh jesuse >) and yea im 20
aw come on man, you have to graduate
god must of answered my prayer today >)
Wanna know what I always say to myself when I feel down.. "Failure is not an option"
And I get pumped just saying those words to myself, im only 19
what state u rep i am from fl
az
u copyed this from the internet so therefore i removed your medel
Join our real-time social learning platform and learn together with your friends!