Answer:
After the United States abolished slavery, Black Americans continued to be marginalized through enforced segregated and diminished access to facilities, housing, education—and opportunities.
Explanation:
Racial segregation existed throughout the United States, North, and South. As one historian of segregation has written, "no reflective historian any longer believes" that Northern states were innocent of the historical crimes of slavery and later segregation. By the twentieth century, Jim Crow laws were not generally on the books of Northern states and cities (though they had been in the nineteenth century.) Nor were racial attitudes as hardened in Northern states as in the Jim Crow South. But segregation, and the racist assumptions that undergirded it, existed north of the Mason-Dixon line too. The difference between segregation in the two regions is usually summarized as "de facto" versus "de jure." Southern racial hierarchies were in fact rigidly enforced by laws that established inflexible boundaries, intended not just to segregate but to establish and maintain white supremacy. In Northern cities in particular, though, segregation was enforced by other means. Neighborhoods,
The awnser is B. Ulysses S. Grant
Answer:
If transported back in time to the Civil Rights Movement I am more likely to participate in non violent actions like the SCLS and Dr. Martin Luther King spoke on. I would sit along side my classmates and friends at the lunch counter and refuse to leave till everyone was served. I would march along side those that marched in Selma and on the March to Washington. I would go with friends and help them register to vote and do peaceful sitins to protest when they are denied the right to so. I would get on a bus with the Freedom riders and travel across the south in protest of where men and women are forced to sit on busses. And I would give up my seat on a bus for an African American to sit down.
Explanation:
U.S. government program to help people get back to work and give them hope