Answer:
Cheating and talking and passing papers
African American settlers traveling westward responded to the racism they faced from white settlers by protesting and starting a cultural renaissance.
Over six million African Americans moved out of the rural Southern United States and migrated to the urban Northeast, Midwest, and West in what is called the Great Migration (1910-1970).
The reasons included the poor economic conditions of African Americans in the Southern states, the continuation of racial segregation and discrimination there including the widespread lynchings of blacks.
These migrants settled in the largest cities like New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles, forming influential communities in these places.
Due to these large-scale migrations, competition for jobs and housing rose, and this caused tensions with the white settlers there. White workers in various factories demanded segregation in the workplace, which erupted in violence.
African American settlers responded through labor activism and protests, and most significantly it led to the Harlem Renaissance in the 1940s, which was an African-American cultural revolution.
To learn more about the Great Migration: brainly.com/question/14178058
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Answer:
On Cherokee land and led to settler demands for the Cherokees’ removal
Answer:
Explanation:
If you are referring to the Reconstruction Acts passed by Congress after the American Civil War, then no. For the most part the Reconstruction Acts protected the freedom of African-Americans. The Reconstruction Acts of 1867 and 1868 defined how the Southern States would be readmitted to the Union. The bills were written by the Radical Republicans. Radical Republicans were committed to enfranchisement and equal rights for freedmen. The rebel states were divided into five military districts. The states had to write new constitutions that protect the freedmen's right to vote. Each state had to ratify the 14th Amendment.