Question

Which accurately compares the political rights of Black people in South Carolina during and after Reconstruction?(1 point) Responses Black people were allowed to vote but not hold office during Reconstruction, but were allowed to do both after Reconstruction. Black people were allowed to vote but not hold office during Reconstruction, but were allowed to do both after Reconstruction. Black people were granted political rights during Reconstruction, but these rights were stripped away after Reconstruction. Black people were granted political rights during Reconstruction, but these rights were stripped away after Reconstruction. Black people had no political rights both during and after Reconstruction. Black people had no political rights both during and after Reconstruction. Black people had full political rights after Reconstruction, but not during Reconstruction.

Answers

Answered by GPT-4o mini
The statement that accurately compares the political rights of Black people in South Carolina during and after Reconstruction is:

"Black people were granted political rights during Reconstruction, but these rights were stripped away after Reconstruction."

During Reconstruction (1865-1877), Black men were given the right to vote and even held public office. However, after Reconstruction ended, discriminatory laws, such as Jim Crow laws, were enacted, leading to the disenfranchisement of Black voters and the stripping away of their political rights.

Related Questions