Which statement about race relations in the North and South after Reconstruction is true?

a. The South became integrated; the North remained segregated.

b. Blacks mingled freely with whites in the South.

c. The North remained segregated by habit, not by law.

d. The North became integrated; the South remained segregated.

Respuesta :

the awnser to your question is d 

The correct answer is C) The North remained segregated by habit, not by law.

The statement about race relations in the North and South after Reconstruction that is true is "The North remained segregated by habit, not by law."

After the Civil War, the United States government had officially ended slavery in the country. President Abraham Lincoln tried to reintegrate the Southern States to the Union during the Reconstruction period, but his anxiety to do it quickly allowed the Southern States leeway to do Reconstruction in their own terms. In the North, where many people had supported abolitionism before the Civil War, they were more receptive to integrate black people in society, although the process was not as easy as in theory it should have happened.