How did southern blacks lose rights in the years after the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth
amendments?
a. New amendments later limited black southerners’ legal status.
b. Few black southerners took advantage of their newfound freedoms.
c. Some white southerners used state legislation, segregation, and violence to limit the freedoms of blacks.
d. Black southerners did not lose any rights during these years.



Answer :

Well it depends, you could say D. because they had new rights and could vote and own land and also were considered U.S. citizens, but you also have to think about the black codes which brought back the plantation system.

Answer:

southern Blacks lost rghts in the years afther the Thirteenth, Fourtheenth, and Fifteenth amendments because c. Some white southeners used state legislation, segregation, and violence to limit the freedoms of blacks.

Explanation:

To understand this answer we need to remember the situation, first of all, southern whites were major part diaries of slavery. Before the abolishment of slavery white supremacy controlled the government and used influence to manipulate politicians to their favor. Now, just because the civil war was fought and the south lost didn't mean their ideologies were going to change. They just adapted to keep living even if that meant changing their political public posture. So, even though they lost they still had money, connections and certain power to keep the racial segregation.