Into the Land of Freedom: African Americans in ReconstructionDiscusses the changes faced by African Americans after the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation, describing how families tried to reunite, find homes, and jobs. |
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Contents
The Day of Jubilee | 6 |
How Free Is Free? | 26 |
Give Us This and We Will Protect Ourselves | 40 |
Black Spirit Black Mind | 58 |
A New War | 72 |
Timeline | 92 |
Further Reading and Websites 106 | |
Common terms and phrases
37 Ibid Abraham Lincoln African Amer American slaves Andrew Johnson Black Codes black women Civil Rights Act color Compromise of 1877 DAY OF JUBILEE declared Democrats Douglass election Emancipation Proclamation enslaved equal protection federal government federal troops Fifteenth Amendment Foner former Confederate former masters former slaves Fourteenth Amendment freedmen Freedmen's Bureau freedom freedpersons Georgia History of American Homestead Act House icans Klux Klan land legislatures Lerner Publications Company Litwack lives Louisiana military Minneapolis Mississippi mule Negro newly freed slaves newspaper North number of black persons plantation planter political promised rebellion recognized Reconstruction regardless of race rights of African schools sharecroppers slave owners slaveholders slavery slaves soldiers South Carolina Southern Homestead Act teachers Tennessee thereof throughout the South U.S. Constitution Union army United Virginia voters W. E. B. Du Bois whip white citizens white employers white Southerners wrote York