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Immigrants avoided the South because of low wages, sharecropping, tenancy, and the pervasive poverty they yielded. Although a national labor market was developing, it evolved only gradually in the late nineteenth century and did not extend to the South, where wages, particularly pay for unskilled workers, lagged far behind
The Republic for Which It Stands: The United States during Reconstruction and the Gilded Age, 1865-1896 (Oxford History of the United States)
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