Separate and unequal.
I suspect that's the phrase you're looking for, even if you haven't provided us with a list of phrase choices. After the Civil War and prior to World War II, blacks in America had acquired a measure of civil rights, but they had not attained truly equal status with white Americans. And many "Jim Crow" laws, as they were called, compelled blacks to stay separated from whites in society.
Https://prezi.com/m/peo2wzxbtlmo/higher-education-1880-1920/
Hope this helps.
In the 1850's, the phrase "bleeding kansas" was used to describe the classhes between proslavery and antislavery groups. The<span> fighting between proslavery and antislavery groups in Kansas was violent.
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Answer:
Man shall have dominion over all the earth, he shall raise it, nuture it, and name it. Genesis 1:28
Explanation:
It was a<span> slave named Toussaint l'Overture.
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