Answer:
As an impact that the Acts of Reconstruction of 1867 had in the South, we can cite the political dominance that the Democrats established in that region.
Step-by-step explanation:
During Reconstruction, the states that had formed the southern states were occupied by United States military troops. Meanwhile, radical Republicans instituted a number of measures that displeased the population of such states, such as allowing African Americans to vote in elections, placing blacks in positions of power, and removing the voting power of about 15,000 whites, former soldiers, or officers confederates. Gradually, the radicals were replaced by more moderate Republicans, who strove to modernize the occupied states.
The Reconstruction left deep wounds in the relations between the old South and North American, that would last approximately a century. In the country's political landscape, the Democrats would have broad political dominance of the South, while the North would be dominated by Republicans. This scenario remained virtually intact until the Great Depression of the 1930s, and would change profoundly only from the 1960s.