Evidence from the text that further supports this claim is shown when the authors state, “From 1878 to 1880, some twenty-five thousand blacks from Louisiana, Texas, and Mississippi surged in a mass exodus to Kansas. The westward flood of these ‘Exodusters’ was stemmed only when steamboat captains refused to transport more black migrants across the Mississippi River” (Cohen & Kennedy 467). The quote above sheds light upon the bona fide significance of the so-called “Exodusters”, in that they fostered a westward migratory trend among Americans. Further bulwarking this posed notion, they furthermore led to a nearly exponential increase in Kansas’s population from the years 1878 to 1880. In brief, the term “Exodusters” was coined, with the primary intention of accounting for those blacks who populated Kansas during this juncture in
Evidence from the text that further supports this claim is shown when the authors state, “From 1878 to 1880, some twenty-five thousand blacks from Louisiana, Texas, and Mississippi surged in a mass exodus to Kansas. The westward flood of these ‘Exodusters’ was stemmed only when steamboat captains refused to transport more black migrants across the Mississippi River” (Cohen & Kennedy 467). The quote above sheds light upon the bona fide significance of the so-called “Exodusters”, in that they fostered a westward migratory trend among Americans. Further bulwarking this posed notion, they furthermore led to a nearly exponential increase in Kansas’s population from the years 1878 to 1880. In brief, the term “Exodusters” was coined, with the primary intention of accounting for those blacks who populated Kansas during this juncture in