Yes
Reconstruction finally came to an official end as part of a compromise involving the southern states. Rutherford B. Hayes removed troops in 1877.
Republican Rutherford B. Hayes was elected President in return for withdrawing federal troops from the South.
To some extent, it began immediately after the end of the Civil War, following the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, who favored a more conciliatory approach to the vanquished South. The Radical Republicans increased their control of Congress following the 1866 elections, and passed the Reconstruction Acts beginning in 1867.
Inefficient law enforcement, economic failure, and resistance led to the end of the reconstruction.
Most significant where? If you mean in the US, it was the end of Reconstruction. That meant the elimination of post-Civil War disabilities imposed on the former Confederate states, thereby marking the start of the modern era in US history. This is the reason many college history courses use that date. A typical and common example might be 'US History Since 1877'.
It end because of the compromise
Reconstruction
end of Reconstruction
I believe it was 1877
1877
march 8 1877
The Reconstruction era began in 1865 and ended in 1877.
The end of reconstruction was made effective by a movement which gathered energy up during the Compromise of 1877, in the process called Redemption.
The US President's inauguration in 1877 that is generally used to mark the end of Reconstruction is Rutherford B. Hayes. His inauguration signaled the end of federal military presence in the South, leading to a withdrawal of federal support for Reconstruction efforts and the beginning of a period of racial segregation and discrimination known as the Jim Crow era.
The Compromise of 1877 was the event that ended Reconstruction. The compromise did more than just end Reconstruction, it also settled the 1876 Presidential election dispute and removed federal troops from the South.
Federal troops were withdrawn from the South
In 1877 when President Hayes removed the last troops in the South