The 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1896 During the later part of Reconstruction, Southern State legislatures started enforcing more Jim Crow laws to legally make African Americans more.
Advertisements

Everything You Need To Know About Plessy v. Ferguson To Succeed In APUSH
The Courts, the Constitution, and the Bill of Rights: Equal Protection © 2003 Constitutional Rights Foundation, Los Angeles, All rights reserved.
Bell Quiz: Use pages ) Define segregation.
SS8H7b TSW evaluate key political, social, and economic changes that occurred in Georgia between 1877 and b. Analyze how rights were denied to African.
“Jim Crow” Segregation in the South
Civil Rights in the Courts
Famous Civil Rights Cases and Events. Plessy vs. Ferguson Case 1892, Homer Plessy was jailed for sitting in the "White" car of the East Louisiana Railroad.
Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857). Background: The Missouri Compromise 1803: U.S. purchases Louisiana Territory from France 1820: Compromise allows slavery.
2 Major Court Cases Page and Page ) Compare and contrast the court cases of Plessy v. Ferguson, 1896 to Brown v. Board of Education, 1954.
We the People, Unit 4.
Major Victory · African Americans continued their struggle for equality, which became known as the civil rights movement.civil rights movement · In 1896,
We the People Unit 3 Lessons 15-20
“Separate But Equal” The Brown v. Board of Education decision.
Objective: To examine the importance of the Supreme Court case of Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, KS.
Social & Political Problems of African Americans Gilded Age Unit 2 Lesson 3.
Dred Scott to the ADA Civil Rights in the USA May 29, 2008 Please be in your seats with your Ivan Nikonov reading out.
CIVIL RIGHTS. Civil Rights  Slavery, Missouri Compromise  Dred Scott(1856)  Civil War  Post Civil War Amendments  Reconstruction, 1877 Compromise,
Objective: To examine the importance of the Civil Rights Movement.
Voting Rights.
What it is: The US constitution was created to establish the principles that the citizens of the US wanted to be established in the government It lays.
Plessy v. Ferguson Big Papi Vinny. In 1892, Homer Plessy took a seat in the “whites only” car of a train and refused to move. He was arrested, and convicted.
LEHHS FOCUS: Lawyer Reconstruction to the Rise of Railroads.
Civil Rights Cases (1883) Background Civil Rights Act in 1875 declared it a crime to deny equal access to public accommodations on account of race or color.
Mrs. Baugh US History Pages , 964. Vocabulary  Disfranchising  Poll tax  Grandfather Clause  Segregation  Jim Crow Laws.
2 Major Court Cases Page and Page ) Compare and contrast the court cases of Plessy v. Ferguson, 1896 to Brown v. Board of Education, 1954.
The Struggle for Equality. Path to Abolishing Slavery The Constitutional Convention would have failed without a compromise on slavery. Counted slaves.
 Reconstruction Amendments:  13 th Amendment ▪ Abolished slavery  14 th Amendment ▪ Granted citizenship, equal protection  15 th Amendment ▪ Suffrage.
What it is: The US constitution was created to establish the principles that the citizens of the US wanted to be established in the government It lays.
The Civil Rights Movement: American Government and Citizenship at Work.
Civil Rights Unit 7: The Judicial Branch, Civil Liberties, and Civil Rights.
NOTES: Landmark Supreme Court Cases Learning Target 3: Civil Rights Cases.
By: Kelsey Byers, Ethan Carter, Micah Hault Plessy vs. Ferguson.
Minority Movements: The Civil Rights Movement. Civil War: Results  13 th Amendment: 1865 – President Andrew Johnson  Abolished Slavery  14 th Amendment.
SIGNS OF JIM CROW from the Library of Congress Collection.
Post- Reconstruction Period Write down your homework: Read your BC book for 25 minutes. Check that you are on track to reach your goal.
Civil Rights Notes Entry 3.5. Bill of Rights Civil liberties: rights of citizenship and equality Civil liberties: rights of citizenship and equality Some.
The 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
The Civil War Amendments
Objective: To examine the importance of the Supreme Court case of Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, KS.
Chapter 28 Our Enduring Constitution
Unit 7: The Judicial Branch, Civil Liberties, and Civil Rights
Origins of the Civil Rights Movement
Equal Protection & the 14th Amendment
From Civil war to Civil Rights
Objective: To examine the importance of the Supreme Court case of Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, KS.
REVIEW: How will the Regents thematic essay test our knowledge of U. S
Civil Rights Movement:
Ch. 5 Vocabulary Review – AP Government
Origins of the Civil Rights Movement
Origins of the Civil Rights Movement
Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857)
Journal 1-21 What does “Separate but equal” mean?
Civil Rights and Equality
LAW DAY 2004 TO WIN EQUALITY BY LAW: Brown v. Board of Education at 50
Racial Segregation and the Rise of the Jim Crow Laws
Civil Rights Notes From icivics.com.
NOTES: Landmark Supreme Court Cases
Civil rights.
Industrialization and Progressivism
(Referring back to your notes from Friday if necessary…
Unit 3: Civil Liberties & Civil Rights
The Courts, the Constitution, and the Bill of Rights: Equal Protection
The 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
Civil Rights: Equality Under the Law Ch. 21
Roots of the Civil Rights Movement
Objective: To examine the importance of the Supreme Court case of Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, KS.
By: Isabella Armstrong and Brianna Dinch
Reconstruction Chapter 20.
Presentation transcript:

The 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution -Due Process of Law (the protection of all citizens under the laws and rights provided in the Constitution)

History of the 14th Amendment The 14th amendment was originally ratified to protect the freedman from the abolishment of his rights by southern states. The 14th amendment was ratified in 1868.

Slavery in the Constitution Framers did not abolish slavery Because Southern states would not have ratified Constitution if it abolished slavery. Main goal in 1787: create stronger nat’l govt. Congress can’t ban importation of slaves until 1808 Fugitive slave clause: free states had to return runaway slaves to their owners 3/5ths Compromise

Dred Scott case Supreme Court ruled (1857) that African Americans are not U.S. citizens Congress cannot prohibit slavery in new U.S. territories Constitutional Amendment was required to grant citizenship to blacks

Civil War Amendments 13th: (1865): freed all slaves, outlawed slavery permanently in the U.S. 14th (1868): all persons born in U.S. are citizens; states cannot violate citizens’ rights; “equal protection of the laws” 15th (1870): right to vote cannot be denied based on race

Failure of Civil War Amendments Congress passed civil rights laws, but President refused to enforce Withdrew federal troops from South in 1877 Leads to Southern states passing “black codes / Jim Crow Laws” to prevent blacks from gaining power or equality Former slaves and free blacks were not treated equally for another 100 years

14th Amendment Original purpose: protect the rights of former slaves and free blacks Made state govt’s protect citizens’ Constitutional rights Limited the power of state govt’s after the Civil War

14th Amendment “No state shall deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws” Applies only to state governments Does it require “equal opportunity”? When can people be treated differently by the law? “rational basis” “compelling” social interest Do Fourteenth Amendment worksheet chart in groups. (difficult to find info on priv and immun,) Show overhead cartoon of states/federal govt roped in.

Do these laws violate the Equal Protection clause of the 14th Amendment? Why/ why not? Adults under 21 can’t drink alcohol Women can’t be firefighters Physically handicapped people can’t be firefighters 15% of all University of Michigan students must be minority races Women can’t be guards at all-male prisons Only men have to register for the draft

“Equal Protection” Cases Plessy v. Ferguson: started June 7, 1892 Homer Plessy was a 30 year African American Shoemaker. He was put in jail for sitting in “white” section on a railroad car in East Louisiana. The judge on the trial was John Howard Ferguson. In 1896 the supreme court heard Plessy’s case and found him guilty.

Plessy v. Ferguson Plessy vs. Ferguson (1896) Segregation by race does not violate the equal protection clause as long as the separate facilities were equal “separate but equal” doctrine Allowed states to continue racial segregation in public facilities

The Plessy Decision Set the precedent that separate facilities for blacks and whites were constitutional as long as they were equal.

A Sign at the Greyhound Bus Station, Rome, Georgia September 1943 A Sign at the Greyhound Bus Station, Rome, Georgia September 1943. (Esther Bubley, photographer)

"The Rex theater for Colored People "The Rex theater for Colored People." Leland, Mississippi, November 1939. Marion Post Wolcott, photographer.

"A cafe near the tobacco market." Durham, North Carolina. May 1940.

" People waiting for a bus at the Greyhound bus terminal " People waiting for a bus at the Greyhound bus terminal." Memphis, Tennessee. September 1943. Esther Bubley, photographer.

“Equal Protection” cases 2. Brown vs. Board of Education (1954) “Separate educational facilities are inherently unequal” Overturned Plessy decision Outlawed segregation in every state Not followed in some southern states until forced by federal troops

Brown v. Board of Education “Segregation of white and Negro children in public schools of a state solely on the basis of race, pursuing state laws that permit or require segregation denies Negro children the equal protection of laws guaranteed by 14th amendment even though other factors of white and Negro schools should be equal.”