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Violence
Violence
that swept across parts of the South in the aftermath of the Civil War,
reflecting the immense tensions created by the end of slavery and Confederate
defeat, and white Southerners' determined resistance to blacks' quest
for autonomy.
Freedpeople were assaulted and murdered for attempting to leave plantations,
disputing contract settlements, seeking to enter white-controlled churches,
and refusing to step off sidewalks to allow white pedestrians to pass.
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Occasionally, as in the Memphis and New Orleans riots of 1866, black communities
became the victims of wholesale assault by white mobs, aided by the local
police. In these outbreaks, schools, churches, and other community institutions,
symbols of black freedom, became the targets of violence, as well as private
homes and individual African-Americans. |
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