Describe the conditions of blacks in the South during the late nineteenth century and discuss how blacks and their leaders attempted to cope with those circumstances

What will be an ideal response?


Answer: The late nineteenth century represented a low point in the conditions of black existence in the American South. Southern whites passed a series of laws segregating blacks and restricting their political and civil rights. Blacks remained economically dependent on whites. Black leaders responded in several ways. Some, such as Frederick Douglass, W.E.B. Du Bois, and Booker T. Washington believed that blacks could eventually achieve equality with whites. Others believed that could never happen and advised abandoning the United States.

History

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The name of the Chinese Nationalist Party that controlled China?s government in the 1920s through the 1940s was the

A) Boxers. B) Reformers. C) Guomindang. D) Communists. E) Revolutionary Alliance.

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The image of Brighton Pavilion reflects the influence of __________ on English architecture

A) Quaker motifs B) Eastern styles C) the Renaissance D) indigenous art

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The Preemption Acts during the 1830s and 1840s

A) increased the minimum amount of public-land purchases. B) reserved choice public lands for the political elite. C) encouraged westward migration by protection of "squatters' rights." D) offered free government land to prospective settlers.

History

In the 1890s, the black journalist Ida B. Wells devoted her writing to attacking

A. the legality of segregation. B. the crime of lynching. C. the arguments of Booker T. Washington. D. the loss of black voting rights. E. restrictions on black education.

History