Kentucky, state, United States: Postwar Adjustment
Postwar Adjustment
As in the South, an overwhelming majority of Kentuckians supported the Democratic party in the period of readjustment after the war, which in many ways was as bitter as the war itself. After the Civil War industrial and commercial recovery was aided by increased railroad construction, but farmers were plagued by the liabilities of the one-crop (tobacco) system. After the turn of the century, the depressed price of tobacco gave rise to a feud between buyers and growers, resulting in the Black Patch War. Night riders terrorized buyers and growers in an effort to stage an effective boycott against monopolistic practices of buyers. For more than a year general lawlessness prevailed until the state militia forced a truce in 1908.
Sections in this article:
- Introduction
- The Twentieth Century
- Postwar Adjustment
- The Slavery Issue and Civil War
- River Rights and Banking Problems
- Native American Resistance and Statehood
- Early Exploration and Settlement
- Government and Higher Education
- Economy
- Geography
- Facts and Figures
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