On This Day in 1877: Reconstruction Ended as Federal Troops Withdrew

(AURN News) — On April 24, 1877, the end of Reconstruction was sealed when President Rutherford B. Hayes ordered the withdrawal of federal troops from Louisiana’s Statehouse, the last federally protected government in the South. Just 12 years after the Civil War, that decision dismantled the fragile protections that had briefly reshaped the nation. During […] The post On This Day in 1877: Reconstruction Ended as Federal Troops Withdrew appeared first on American Urban Radio Networks.

On This Day in 1877: Reconstruction Ended as Federal Troops Withdrew

(AURN News) — On April 24, 1877, the end of Reconstruction was sealed when President Rutherford B. Hayes ordered the withdrawal of federal troops from Louisiana’s Statehouse, the last federally protected government in the South.

Just 12 years after the Civil War, that decision dismantled the fragile protections that had briefly reshaped the nation.

This is an undated photo of U.S. President Rutherford B. Hayes. (AP Photo)

During the Reconstruction era, Black Americans gained citizenship, voting rights and political power, with federal troops enforcing those hard-won freedoms against violent white resistance.

However, once those troops left, the door swung wide open for a ruthless backlash.

White supremacist rule surged back, voter suppression spread and systems such as sharecropping and segregation took hold.

What had been a revolutionary experiment in multiracial democracy was abandoned, and for generations Black Americans paid the price for that retreat.


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The post On This Day in 1877: Reconstruction Ended as Federal Troops Withdrew appeared first on American Urban Radio Networks.