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Manufacturing industry.
becausE it was !!
It had strong economic ties with the North and the South
They did not value education and hard work.
access to education
It restricted their economic rights and prevented them from holding office, voting, serving on a jury or receiving a public education.
It dramatically declined.
It reformed education because the governments began to create public school systems for both races which had not existed in the South before.
South Africa is a strategic partner of the United States, with strong collaboration in the areas of health, education, environment and digital economy
I'll assume that the question here is "Were public schools in the South segregated?" On that tack, yes. Up until the case of Brown vs. Board of Education in 1954, I believe.
It led to a series of battles over integration.
Industrial development and agricultural diversification
State governments created public schools for both black and white children.
The state government would fund public education.
John Furman Thomason has written: 'The foundations of the public schools of South Carolina' -- subject(s): Public schools 'History and experience or the Supreme Court?' -- subject(s): Segregation in education, Education, African Americans
The motto of South Indian Education Society is 'Rise With Education'.
The decision in Brown v Board of Education primarily focused on ending racial segregation in public K-12 schools. While the ruling did not directly apply to colleges and universities in the South at the time, it laid the groundwork for future legal challenges to desegregate higher education institutions. Subsequent cases, such as Sweatt v. Painter and University of California v. Bakke, built on the principles established in Brown to challenge racial segregation in higher education as well.