Despite this setback, Confederate blacks continue to find ways to resist.
Middle-class whites and blacks continued to leave the city.
Others argue that blacks will continue to set the pace with regard to the racial climate.
But blacks continue to account for less than 5 percent of Dearborn's population.
In contrast, blacks continue to vote overwhelmingly Democratic and show no signs of switching parties.
After the war, blacks continued to settled in the area on land they were given or that the bought from other landowners.
Over the next six years blacks continued to move from the States.
The result, says Labov, is that blacks and whites continue to grow further apart in the way each group speaks the language.
The blacks of South Africa, once free, did not continue apartheid by voting for whites.
By 1842, Uruguay abolished slavery, but blacks continued in many of the same functions.