Answer:
B. Set aside the Sea Islands and forty-acres tracts of land in South Carolina for black families, is the correct answer.
Step-by-step explanation:
Forty acres and a mule was proclaimed by General William Sherman after the civil war, It promised to allot lands the newly freed slaves and the size of the plot couldn't be more than 40 acres. Lincoln's successor Andrew Johnson reversed the proclamation and only a few slaves were able to get the benefits.
In 1863 President Abraham Lincoln ordered the confiscation of land in South Carolina to sold to freedman in twenty-acre plots, Treasury Salmon chase expanded it to be forty acres per family. The order also reserved the coastal land in Georgia and South Carolina for the blacks.
The land were distributed under the military jurisdiction and after some time the states emphasized on wage labor. Hence all the land that was given during the war was returned to it, former owner. Blacks people did manged to get land under the homesteading act. Black land ownership was most in the Mississippi because the land behind the riverfront was underdeveloped. The financial recession of 1910 caused loss of the property for