Question
What impact did the Compromise of 1877 have on the development of Jim Crow laws?(1 point)
Responses
After the Compromise, northern troops moved into the South to establish the Republican governments that passed many Jim Crow laws.
After the Compromise, northern troops moved into the South to establish the Republican governments that passed many Jim Crow laws.
The Compromise included a provision that allowed sharecropping and crop-lien systems to be legitimized.
The Compromise included a provision that allowed sharecropping and crop-lien systems to be legitimized.
The Compromise was politically necessary to get the Reconstruction Amendments passed.
The Compromise was politically necessary to get the Reconstruction Amendments passed.
After the Compromise, northern troops were removed from the South, which left African Americans with no legal protections.
Responses
After the Compromise, northern troops moved into the South to establish the Republican governments that passed many Jim Crow laws.
After the Compromise, northern troops moved into the South to establish the Republican governments that passed many Jim Crow laws.
The Compromise included a provision that allowed sharecropping and crop-lien systems to be legitimized.
The Compromise included a provision that allowed sharecropping and crop-lien systems to be legitimized.
The Compromise was politically necessary to get the Reconstruction Amendments passed.
The Compromise was politically necessary to get the Reconstruction Amendments passed.
After the Compromise, northern troops were removed from the South, which left African Americans with no legal protections.
Answers
GPT-4o mini
The most accurate response regarding the impact of the Compromise of 1877 on the development of Jim Crow laws is:
**After the Compromise, northern troops were removed from the South, which left African Americans with no legal protections.**
This removal of federal troops effectively ended Reconstruction and allowed Southern states to enact Jim Crow laws, which enforced racial segregation and disenfranchised African Americans.
**After the Compromise, northern troops were removed from the South, which left African Americans with no legal protections.**
This removal of federal troops effectively ended Reconstruction and allowed Southern states to enact Jim Crow laws, which enforced racial segregation and disenfranchised African Americans.