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Definition
| Was available through local merchants who charged high interest rates. |
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Term
| The agricultural ladder was a myth because |
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Definition
| Few sharecroppers and tenant farmers were able to purchase their own land. |
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Term
| Advocates of the new South call for |
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Definition
| Revitalizing the southern economy through industrialization. |
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Term
| Individualization failed to invigorate the southern economy because |
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Definition
| Workers wages were too low to promote economic growth. |
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Term
| The citizens of the new South did not experience increased human services or improved infrastructure because |
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Definition
| The average Southerner preferred remain ignorant and impoverished. |
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Term
| Low workers waged in the South |
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Definition
| Stifled the expansion of the southern economy. |
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Term
| White Southerners rejected the Republican party because |
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Definition
| She had identified Republicans with Lincoln and the emancipation of the slaves. |
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Term
| In the new South African-Americans |
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Definition
| Were dominated by whites in part to the use of racial segregation. |
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Term
| A potential obstacle to the implementation of state segregation law was |
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Definition
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Term
| the 1896 ruling in Plessy versus Ferguson |
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Definition
| Declared racial segregation to be constitutional |
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Term
| In an effort to invade the goal of the 15th amendment white Southerners |
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Definition
| Used tools such as the literacy tests and poll tax to limit black voter participation. |
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Term
| Democrats retained power in the south by |
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Definition
| Using the racial anxieties of poor whites to convince them to vote Democratic. |
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Term
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Definition
| Serves to unite and unify the white southern population |
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Term
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Definition
| urged African-Americans to accept segregation while they built economic power |
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Term
| The role played by the federal government in the industrial expansion of the North involved |
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Definition
| Providing loans and grants to inventors who propose technological innovation. |
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Term
| Personal savings rate in the North |
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Definition
| Concentrated a source of capital that help stimulate northern economic growth. |
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Term
| The economic growth of the North in the late 19th century was in part caused by |
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Definition
| The low savings rates of Northern workers who spent all their money on factory goods made in the North. |
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Term
| Stimulants to the growth in the northern economy included |
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Definition
| The development of new technologies which improve worker productivity. |
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Term
| " Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude a set as a punishment for crime where of the parties shall be duly convinced, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction" |
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Definition
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Term
| After the Civil War, land redistribution in the South |
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Definition
| Never happen, because Americans resisted the notation of redistributing property. |
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Term
| Extractive industries are a problematic because |
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Definition
| They contribute to the degration of the environment. |
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Term
| Value added industries in the South |
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Definition
| Rely upon northern capital, so their profits did not stay in the South. |
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Term
| southren elites were able to control worker wages in part by |
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Definition
| Using convent labor to expand the label pool. |
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Term
| Northern began industrializing in the early 19th century |
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Definition
| Because agriculture was not a secure route to wealth in the region |
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Term
| The North promoted industrialization in the early 1800s because |
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Definition
| Northerners were intelligently superior to Americans in other regions. |
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Term
| In response to cotton prices in the late 19th century, most southern farmers |
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Definition
| Increased cotton production in an effort to maintain profits. |
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