QUESTION IMAGE
Question
during the late nineteenth century, what social and economic circumstances did advocates for a new south face in the postwar south, as compared to the north?
correct answer(s)
the south was far less successful than the north, both in education and in income.
incorrect answer(s)
though far less productive, the south was much wealthier than the north due to the large multigenerational plantations that continued to profit even after the war.
the south was far less industrial than the north and depended on the region for goods that southern states were incapable of manufacturing themselves.
the south saw a much larger percentage of black people migrating to cities and away from the countryside, often at a higher rate than black people moved in the north.
The question is about the social and economic circumstances of the post - Civil War South compared to the North. The correct answer is "The South was far less successful than the North, both in education and in income" because after the Civil War, the South faced many challenges in rebuilding its economy and educational system, and generally lagged behind the North in these aspects. The other options have inaccuracies: the South was not wealthier than the North after the war (the plantation economy was devastated), the southern states were not completely incapable of manufacturing (they had some industrial development, though limited), and the option about Black migration is more about demographic movement rather than a comparative success factor between the South and the North in a broad social - economic sense.
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The South was far less successful than the North, both in education and in income.