which of the following did NOT restrict voting rights of the African Americans after 1867?

1: Poll Tax
2: Literacy test
3: grandfather clause
4: Sharecropping

I chose #4 is this correct? I was thinking grandfather clause, but they seemed to restrict, because you could vote, only if your father or grandfather voted.So, to me that is a restriction.

#4 is correct, yes.

4 is correct. Sharecropping had nothing to do with voting.

You are correct. Sharecropping limited economic opportunities, but not, directly, voting.

Thank you all very much!!

That is correct. Thank you.

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Huh. yes correct????? HMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM

[Conetnt delted] offensive item: yes

The correct answer is actually #4: Sharecropping. Sharecropping was not a method used to directly restrict voting rights of African Americans after 1867. Sharecropping was an agricultural labor system that emerged in the South during the Reconstruction era, where freed slaves and poor whites would work on a landowner's plantation in exchange for a portion of the crops they produced. While sharecropping had its own set of challenges and limitations, it was not specifically designed as a means to restrict voting rights.

On the other hand, the other options you mentioned - the poll tax, literacy test, and grandfather clause - were all methods used to restrict voting rights of African Americans during that time period.

1. Poll Tax: A poll tax was a fee imposed on voters, requiring them to pay a certain amount of money in order to vote. This directly targeted African Americans who were often socioeconomically disadvantaged and could not afford to pay the tax.

2. Literacy test: A literacy test required potential voters to demonstrate their ability to read and interpret a passage of text. This was often implemented in a discriminatory manner, where African Americans were given more difficult tests or provided with obscure passages to read, making it difficult for them to meet the requirements.

3. Grandfather clause: The grandfather clause was a legal provision that allowed individuals to vote only if their ancestors had been eligible to vote before 1867. This was designed to exempt poor and illiterate white voters from the literacy tests and poll taxes, while also preventing most African Americans from voting since their ancestors had been enslaved and unable to vote.

So, while the grandfather clause may seem contradictory, as it did allow some African Americans to vote if their fathers or grandfathers had been eligible, it still overall restricted the voting rights of the majority of African Americans.