There were many factors that led to the failure of reconstruction post Civil War. One of the reasons why the reconstruction could be interpreted as a failure is due to the fact that some of the northerners and southerners still had tension. After the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, Andrew Jackson took the role as President. Andrew Jackson did not consider reconstruction for the blacks, and he did not communicate with leaders in the south. Another reason why the reconstruction did not work was because…
Words 1831 - Pages 8
Black Americans – Extended Essay. How important was the Klu Klux Klan in causing the problems facing black Americans in the 1920’s and 1930’s. Black Americans throughout the 1920’s and 1930’s faced discrimination in the most brutal ways by the Klu Klux Klan particularly in the south. Organised groups of racists used lynching to terrorise African Americans. However, this racist brutality has to be understood in context of American society and government at that time. The Jim Crow laws made segregation…
Words 2127 - Pages 9
UNIT 4 FINAL ASSESSMENT: IMPACT OF THE CIVIL WAR. INTRODUCTION / CONTEXT The Civil War began in April 1861 and ended in April 1865, which marked a significant movement in American history. Before the War began, disagreements between Northern and Southern states were driven by different beliefs and economic needs. Slavery was a major reason that split the country into two different sides, both with different opinions on slavery. In the South, where agriculture was big, slavery was an essential part…
Words 1358 - Pages 6
Although the end of the Civil War in 1865 marked the liberation of over 4 million slaves, American society still faced many obstacles in becoming a truly free country for freedmen. The process of integrating blacks into white society and granting them deserved civil rights, known as Reconstruction, consisted of two main phases. In May of 1865, President Johnson enacted the first stage of Reconstruction, in which he returned all the property of ex-Confederates who agreed to support the 13th amendment…
Words 593 - Pages 3
black people could not handle being educated. Among those that believed black should not be educated was the Ku Klux Klan. The Ku Klux Klan felt that blacks did not deserve an education because that would place them in an equal social standing to white people (Ward). Their form of opposition to the education of blacks was deeply rooted into the continuation of white supremacy. The Klu Klux Klan led mass waves of murder against blacks that would try and use their right to vote or receive an education…
Words 1864 - Pages 8
Baptist Church, a predominantly African-American church that served as a meeting ground to many Civil Rights activists. Four members of the white supremacist group, the Klu Klux Klan, planted the bomb. The KKK members had the bomb go off during Sunday school, knowing that many people would be gathered in the building, killing four and injuring twenty-two, making it one of the deadliest attacks during the Civil Rights Movement. Eleven-year-old Denise McNair, and fourteen-year-olds Addie Mae Collins, Carole…
Words 420 - Pages 2
The KKK tormented and killed people who voice opinions that were against them, but that only help push the Civil Rights Movement. The KKK tormented the freedom riders but that only backfired when more people began to support the freedom riders. During the Anniston, Alabama trip some Freedom Riders were attacked by the KKK. The racist thugs smashed windows, slashed tires and threatened the Riders before local police escorted the bus out of town.They were forced to pull over because a long line of…
Words 861 - Pages 4
The Civil Rights Movement began in the late 1950s. It was a social movement in an effort to end segregation and discrimination against Blacks. The movement predominantly took place in the south. There were protests, boycotts and marches taking place throughout the south. Home of the Brave (2004) by Nancy Dickenson, is a documentary addressing the killing of White civil rights activist, Viola Gregg Liuzzo. The documentary does more than addresses the issues of discrimination. Home of the Brave (2004)…
Words 1319 - Pages 6
The Klu Klux Klan was founded in the South as response to the Emancipation Proclamation. They harassed Catholics, Jews, African-Americans, women and bombed schools, churches, including violence against blacks. In 1928, Jim Crow Laws were created to seperate black and white people from even the slightest bit of contact. Activists used, during the Civil Rights movement, multiple strategies that resulted in both successes and failures. Paragraph 1: (strategies) However, one of the many strategies activists…
Words 551 - Pages 3
the twentieth century was a time of change for the black man because of the black power movement. The black power movement gave African Americans recognition in American society's throughout the country because of their will to fight and strive for equality. The…
Words 714 - Pages 3