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  • ...i After Reconstruction, 1877-1917'' (2006) [http://www.amazon.com/Rednecks-Redeemers-Race-Mississippi-Reconstruction/dp/1578068479/ref=sr_1_6/103-4827826-546304
    10 KB (1,316 words) - 10:31, 19 June 2023
  • ...demption, 1873-77''', white supremacist Southerners (calling themselves "[[Redeemers]]") defeated the Republicans and took control of each southern state, marki ...heir opponents, the conservative–Democratic coalition, calling themselves "Redeemers" after 1870. Violence sponsored by the [[Ku Klux Klan]] was overcome by fed
    57 KB (8,536 words) - 10:16, 16 August 2023
  • * Wilson, George M. ''Patriots and Redeemers in Japan: Motives in the Meiji Restoration.'' (1992). 201 pp.
    15 KB (2,097 words) - 09:22, 23 October 2009
  • ...rent dates (the latest 1877), and was followed in each Southern state by [[Redeemers|Redeemer]] governments that passed the Jim Crow laws to separate the races. After 1877, the Redeemers reversed many of the civil rights gains that African Americans had made dur
    26 KB (4,083 words) - 13:56, 9 February 2024
  • ...led the great majority of white southerners into the Democratic Party as [[Redeemers]]. ...former [[Copperheads (politics)|Copperheads]]). They were joined by the [[Redeemers]] in the South and by Catholic immigrants, especially [[Irish American]] an
    25 KB (3,607 words) - 13:08, 9 August 2023
  • ...1877]] ended Reconstruction and brought an era where conservative white "[Redeemers]" and pro-business [[Bourbon Democrats]] were in control. The state became
    14 KB (2,251 words) - 09:01, 9 August 2023
  • ...while; they were all overthrown by conservative-Democratic coalitions of [[Redeemers]] in 1870-77.
    18 KB (2,791 words) - 09:02, 9 August 2023
  • ..."Mississippi plan", which had redeemed that state in 1874, South Carolina Redeemers employed intimidation, persuasion, and control of the blacks. Armed with he ...nment dissolved and Chamberlain headed back north, as Wade Hampton and his Redeemers took control.
    52 KB (7,914 words) - 03:40, 6 February 2010
  • ...political gains of former slaves. By 1874 the conservative Democrats, or [[Redeemers]], took power as Richard Coke, was elected governor. Shortly thereafter the
    43 KB (6,654 words) - 09:27, 11 September 2023
  • ...1873 energized the Democrats. They won control of the House and formed "[[Redeemers|Redeemer]]" coalitions which recaptured control of each southern state, in
    50 KB (7,415 words) - 09:27, 11 September 2023
  • ...of Reconstruction and consequent hostility to the Republican Party. The [[Redeemers]] gave the Democrats control of every Southern state (by the [[Compromise o
    52 KB (7,770 words) - 16:53, 12 March 2024
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