Joblessness was their biggest problem. Many headed North to seek work where they could.
Others went back to Africa to form the nation of Liberia so they could live in 'freedom'. That place has been a hell-hole.
The first gun control laws were created specifically to prevent these free blacks from sharing in the Right to Keep and Bear Arms. The Southern Democrats feared their former slaves and came up with a variety of ways to prevent them from really becoming equal. The 'poll tax' was another oppressive law designed to keep the freed blacks, who had no money, from voting by charging a tax at the voting booth.
Despite all this, overall and for many decades, the emancipated slaves made a great deal of social progress by working hard to improve their lives. Martin Luther King Jr. was the epitome of that progress with his vision for a 'color blind' society.
Today, however, race-baiting black leaders like Jesse Jackson try to prevent the creation of a color blind society. They seem to think that racism is a useful tool to get special treatment - resulting in special profits for themselves. They work hard to re-enslave blacks under the welfare system instead of working to help them become self-sufficient and productive. They teach their following to feel like 'victims' who have to depend on handouts instead of like 'adults' who can overcome obstacles. Many of them have forgotten the noble leadership of MLK.
2007-02-02 04:52:40
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answer #1
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answered by speakeasy 6
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Although they were free they still had a bad time. They were required to carry emancipation papers and most people would not hire or pay them enough to live.
2007-02-02 04:57:07
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answer #2
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answered by Dotr 5
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I think many talked with the plantation owner to see if they could stay on, as paid workers or at least to keep getting food or rent. Moving north or taking up sharecropping happened over the years since emancipation.
The north didn't see large numbers of blacks until world war one, when the factories needed workers. And in the army. You'd read letters from soldiers in ww1 and they's say "I saw my first airplane and my first *****!"
2007-02-02 04:55:22
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answer #3
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answered by John K 5
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The freedmen did no longer quite respond, it grew to become into regularly the Republican government that pushed extensive efforts to objective to enfranchise ex-slaves and supply them equivalent rights. in spite of the undeniable fact that there have been many strikes by using human beings like Booker T Washington and internet Du Bois that had diverse ideas on a thank you to realize equality between races.
2016-11-24 19:21:03
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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There were problems with employment at first, many of them became sharecroppers where they had more freedom than they had being slaves, and could actually make money. Of course they preferred their freedom, but many had a hard time adjusting initially seeing as how they were brought up in slavery.
2007-02-02 04:55:28
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answer #5
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answered by Pfo 7
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Joined union armies, entered politics, worked our own land, became positive citizens.
2007-02-02 04:53:10
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answer #6
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answered by lundstroms2004 6
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Quite a lot of them are still running from child support.
2007-02-02 04:54:32
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answer #7
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answered by ? 1
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seperating themselves from whites during reconstruction
2007-02-02 05:04:54
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answer #8
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answered by J Q Public 6
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