Answer:
Black Migration; African Americans
Explanation:
No one is actually black. Use Nigerian, or African American, or Zimbabwean, etc.
Hope this helps
In the mid-1800s, pioneers who traveled through the great plains to the west faced group of summer rainstorms and rugged mountains.
<h3>What difficulties did the people of the Great Plains face?</h3>
- The land was dry and unproductive, making crop cultivation difficult. Furthermore, dangerous animals such as buffalo were free to roam. To survive in these harsh conditions, the Plains Indians had modified their way of life.
- Their survival depended on buffalo hunting. Gold rush and mining opportunities (silver in Nevada) The opportunity to work in the cattle industry; to be a "cowboy" Faster travel to the West by railroad; increased supply availability due to the railroad The Homestead Act allows you to buy land for a low cost.
- The Great Plains were long inhabited by Native Americans, who hunted the teeming herds of buffalo (see bison) that roamed the grasslands and were nearly extinct by the end of the nineteenth century due to wholesale slaughter by settlers and the US army. In the 17th century, the Spanish explored the region.
To learn more about Great plains refer to,
brainly.com/question/720823
#SPJ4
Sorry the answer took so long -laughs- but it only created a social hierarchy that stood for decades.
Many former salves expected the federal government to give them a certain amount of land as compensation for all the work they had done during the slave era. During Reconstruction, however, the conflict over labor resulted in the sharecropping system, in which black families would rent small plots of land in return for a portion of their crop, to be given to the landowner at the end of each year.
The answer to your question is c