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Which of the following statements accurately describes life in the South in the 1920s?
Because the automobile industry had barely begun and transportation was limited, the South remained entirely insulated from the North and the effects of consumerism.
The South experienced a rise in urbanization much as the North did; however, neither region could catch up to the West in terms of population.
Thanks to the eradication of Jim Crow laws, the South had been transformed into a region where African Americans had a large political presence and increasingly had white-collar jobs.
Compared to other regions, the South remained the poorest and most rural, with fewer farmers owning their land and black sharecroppers staying especially poor.
The South became home to the largest and most diverse cities in the country, partly enabled by the high crop prices of the agricultural sector.