Answer:
the South was still trying to recover from the Civil War. The infrastructure in the region was still in shambles, especially in the Lower South, along the route William Sherman took on his March to the Sea. Politically, poor and middle class whites had more power than they did before the war, though poor whites were still sharecroppers in many instances. The region's economy was starting to diversify, with Alabama starting to produce more iron and textile mills coming to North Carolina, in order to take advantage of the surplus of labor in the South. The South remained a rural region and sharecropping would be a way of life and generational poverty until WWII. Reconstruction brought the end of slavery, but many places passed their own "black codes" which made it a crime for blacks to travel with passes or to loiter. Many blacks were arrested and put on chain gangs in the post-Reconstruction South.
Explanation:
is this good?
hope it helped good luck