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Essay About Slavery In The South After The Civil War

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As the Civil War ended, “slavery had been abolished in two union slave states, Maryland and Missouri”. One of which is our very own hometown. Then in “1865 Congress approved the necessary states ratified the thirteenth amendment which in turn abolished slavery in all parts of the United States”, which was a major step forward in United States History. Especially after two centuries of having slavery legal. But it wasn’t going slavery wasn’t going to go that easy especially for the South without a fight. There was people who had been in their ways about slavery for way too long to let something change overnight. Many of these white’s in the south believed how they lived there lives there was nothing wrong with it, which is absolutely astonishing that they actually thought any part of that. Black’s in the south was going have to go through a lot before they could actually see changes worth talking about. It became quite the struggle for many years to come.
While the North was able to figure out all the kinks in ending slavery and segregation, the south had a harder time doing so. There was no worse time period for the South than the aftermath of the Civil War. “For white southerners’ freedom meant the ability to control their own destinies without interference from the North or the federal government”. Slavery “ended”. But many white …show more content…

By the federal government keeping troops in the South after the war, that tells you that there was a major problem in the south. A problem that the government had a hard time controlling and being able to get the south to go along with the outcome of the war. “White planters in the South believed that they were fighting for what they “believed” to be freedom”. This was not the truth at all. But this is what they grew up or was in the ways of these white planters for so long that they did not know any other way of

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