Changing Activism: Hal Baron Lays Out Strategy for Civil Rights in Public HousingMain MenuIntroductionThe SourceAbout this SourceAbout this EditionSupplementsBibliographyCredits and AcknowledgementsAbout SourceLabKatelyn Barbourcc42a4c4dc262b28574683029e7df223d65904eeBridget Ulbert708337cfd195cfd35bd8d4b14b397295666efd8fBrody Suskiba05603f87fb83b2453b36f690ad681d589c63b3
Civil Rights legislation of the Reconstruction Era:
12023-04-25T13:48:34+00:00Alex Drydenbb5ccf4591af9a1e2b579ecc283a321fc7a7d87d1701plain2023-04-25T13:48:34+00:00Alex Drydenbb5ccf4591af9a1e2b579ecc283a321fc7a7d87dReferring to the “Reconstruction Acts”, including the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments, which freed African Americans from slavery, granted African Americans citizenship, and granted African American men the right to vote. (7)
Contents of this annotation:
12023-04-25T13:48:34+00:00Alex Drydenbb5ccf4591af9a1e2b579ecc283a321fc7a7d87dHal Baron Memo (p 6)1(7) “Reconstruction and Rights : Civil War and Reconstruction, 1861-1877 : U.S. History Primary Source Timeline : Classroom Materials at the Library of Congress : Library of Congress.” The Library of Congress. Accessed May 9, 2022. https://www.loc.gov/classroom-materials/united-states-history-primary-source-timeline/civil-war-and-reconstruction-1861-1877/reconstruction-and-rights/.plain2023-04-25T13:48:34+00:00Alex Drydenbb5ccf4591af9a1e2b579ecc283a321fc7a7d87d