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Showing posts with the label Reconstruction

life after being freed in the Americas

  Jim Crow laws were rules created in the late 1800s and early 1900s that enforced separation between Black and white Americans, mainly in Southern states. These laws affected everyday life, including schools, transportation, housing, and public spaces. Jim Crow laws were designed to limit opportunities for African Americans and maintain unequal treatment under the law. When the Atlantic Trade finally began to decline in the 1800s, the world did not instantly become equal or fair for Black people or their descendants. Ending the trade was only the first step. The systems, beliefs, and economic structures built during centuries of slavery continued to shape societies long after the last slave ship crossed the ocean. Understanding what happened after the trade helps us see how deeply it affected Africa, the Americas, and the entire world. Life after hardship in the Americas is remembered as a time of resilience and determination. It reflects the ability to adapt while holding onto v...

sharecropping

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sharecropping sharecropping developed in the southern United States after the Civil War. Many formerly enslaved families needed land to farm, while landowners needed labor. This system became a common way for agriculture to continue during Reconstruction By Jack Delano - LC-USF351-599 FSA/OWI Collection Prints and Photographs Division Library of 1] photo by Jack Delano, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=41830912 Landowners often lacked money to pay wages, and freed families lacked land and supplies. Sharecropping appeared to offer a solution by allowing families to farmland in exchange for a portion of the crops they produced. Sharecropping was a farming arrangement where a family worked a piece of land owned by someone else. Instead of receiving pay, the family gave a share of the harvested crops to the landowner at the end of the season.                                  ...