Nevertheless, the majority of the South remained agricultural based; sharecropping was practiced. .
Whites saw it difficult to accept the racial equality after slavery where blacks were equal to whites; whites attempted to strip Africans of their rights to vote. These strategies include:- .
i. Placing polling station at difficult places for blacks to reach.
ii. Ballot stuffing or voter padding.
iii. Bribery.
iv. Legislature which withdrew voting district .
v. Financial requirement to vote e.g. Voting taxes.
vi. Literacy test which involved the reading of the constitution.
vii. Property ownership.
viii. Resident test.
Jim Crow Laws stated blacks could not ride in the same railroad as whites. Blacks had no access to many public rivers and beaches etc.sed of raping white women.
Blacks were accu.
Whites were violent to black (lynching of black by white mob) e.g. Klu Klux Klan also they formed riots against blacks such as the Wilmington Riot.
Cotton was still the dependent crop in the south. It had distinguished itself as the economic crop of the South. Added to the dilemma, South cotton was competed by cotton from Egypt and planter barely were able to afford capital to purchase the farm equipment to cultivate profitable.
The brutality met by the blacks caused may of them to migrate to other regions in the United States , some protested froming leagues and organisation while some praticed accommodation.
The Republican union failed because the characteristics of the old south outnumbered those of the New South; therefore, it was not necessarily "new- except for minor changes.
Describe the three cycles of the western economy -mining, ranching, farming and assess their impact on life on the frontier.
In the United States, territorial government was organised in the west in the 1850's. This organisation saw the establishment of railroads, which brought other jobs such as mining, ranching and farming(western economy).