Reintegration of the American South Compare and contrast the experiences of African Americans in various US regions during the late 19 th Century.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Segregation and Discrimination
Advertisements

Segregation & Discrimination
The Rise of Segregation
Unit 6: Lesson 2 Social and Political Change
Segregation and Discrimination
After the Civil War…  In the years right after the Civil War, freedmen (former slaves) were able to vote and participate in government, thanks to the.
SEPARATE BUT EQUAL? Legalized Segregation in the US.
Race Relations s.
Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. Dubois
Plessy v. Ferguson (1896).
Social & Political Problems of African Americans Gilded Age Unit 2 Lesson 3.
Ch. 17 – Life in the Gilded Age  In the later 1900s, education became more accessible.  Booker T. Washington – born into slavery,
The Rise of Segregation
Segregation & Discrimination at the turn of the century.
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.
The Rise of segregation. Discrimination:  What is it?  To make a difference in treatment or favor on a basis other than individual merit.
AFRICAN AMERICANS IN THE PROGRESSIVE ERA Discrimination and Racism.
Segregation in the South Race Relations in Post- Reconstruction America.
AFRICAN AMERICANS MOVE NORTH. NAACP – National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
African Americans become full citizens. 13 th Amendment – ended slavery. 14 th Amendment – forbid states from denying Constitutional rights to any citizens.
Discrimination and Segregation Against African Americans.
Segregation and Discrimination Changes in American Life Chapter 21 Section 3.
Chapter 16 Politics and Reform Section 3 The Rise of Segregation.
The World of Jim Crow -- chapter 9, section 3 --.
Resistance and Repression Click the mouse button to display the information. After Reconstruction, most African Americans were sharecroppers, or landless.
6:5 ● Attempts to unify Whites and African Americans fail (in South) ● “poll tax”: charge $2 to vote ● Literacy tests ● Jim Crow Laws ● Laws passed in.
The Rise of Segregation
Race in the Early-1900s: Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. DuBois.
W.E.B. Du Bois. Segregation should be stopped now FULL political, civil, and social rights for African Americans.
Getting to California sharecropper – landless farmers who had to give the landlord a large share of their crops to cover their costs for rent and farming.
Post- Reconstruction Period Write down your homework: Read your BC book for 25 minutes. Check that you are on track to reach your goal.
Striving for Equality Topic 3.3. Voting Restrictions Concerns = too much political power for African Americans if they voteConcerns = too much political.
Discrimination against African Americans History of Racism Racism existed in the US before slavery Led to slavery Grew after slavery ended.
Segregation & Discrimination Gina Dominico Portia Davidson November 20, rd Period Pages:
How does the history of racism in America develop?
The Rise of Segregation Chapter 13 Section 5. Background ● After Reconstruction ended, Southern states began passing laws that eroded the rights of African.
The Jim Crow Era. Following Reconstruction, the Southern states will seek to bypass the Civil War Amendments which guaranteed civil rights, and voting.
Segregation in the South
Happy Wednesday! Get out your Populism- Problems and Solutions Sheet.
Spotlight on Booker T. Washington and WEB Dubois
QOTD 19) The Seventeenth Amendment (17th): a) ended segregation.
Racial Segregation Jim Crow Laws The African American Response
Segregation & Discrimination at the turn of the century
19th Jim Crow and Segregation - Chapter. 11, Section 3
Background for benchmark writing test
Life at the Turn of the 20th Century
Jim Crow & Plessy V. Ferguson
Inequalities and Responses
Segregation & Discrimination
Focus Question: Who was a stronger advocate for African-Americans, Booker T. Washington or W.E.B. DuBois? Do Now: Read and annotate “Plessy v. Ferguson”
Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) In 1890, the state of Louisiana passed the "Separate Car Act" Comité des Citoyens (Committee of Citizens) formed and decided.
THE RISE OF SEGREGATION
SEGREGATION.
Post Reconstruction: Jim Crow in the South
African-American Discrimination and Segregation
Striving for Equality Topic 3.3.
W.E.B. Du Bois.
Plessy v. Ferguson (1896).
Segregation and Discrimination
Ch 11, Sec 3: The Rise of Segregation
The Rise of Segregation
In the South, grandfather clauses, literacy tests, and poll taxes were devices used to deny African Americans the right to vote.
The Rise of Segregation
Life after Reconstruction
African-American Discrimination and Segregation
Plessy v. Ferguson Supreme Court Case 1896
Segregation And Discrimination
Presentation transcript:

Reintegration of the American South Compare and contrast the experiences of African Americans in various US regions during the late 19 th Century.

The Rise of Jim Crow Unlike Native Americans who were seen as foreign or outside the norm of American society, African Americans (especially in the South) had been a part of society and the economy for centuries. Unsure of how to proceed following Reconstruction, many southern legislatures adopted laws to limit the rights of their former slaves.

Tactics In order to limit the political power of African Americans in areas where they made up the majority of the population, legislatures tried many tactics, including: ◦Poll taxes ◦Literacy tests

Jim Crow Known as “Jim Crow” laws, measures to enforce segregation became the norm in most southern states following Reconstruction. The first passed in Tennessee in 1881 required separate cars for blacks and whites on trains. Within a few years nearly every part of daily life was segregated in the South.

At the bus station, Durham, North Carolina, 1940.

A rest stop for bus passengers on the way from Louisville, Kentucky to Nashville, Tennessee, with separate entrance for Blacks

Movie theater’s "Colored" entrance, Belzoni, Mississippi

Plessy was 7/8 white, an “octoroon” in the language of the day. He was chosen to challenge the law due to his light complexion. In 1890, Louisiana passed a law requiring separate cars for African American on trains. Homer Plessy, an African America, bought a ticket and took a seat in the white only car to test the new law. He was arrested.

Plessy v. Ferguson Plessy’s case went to the US Supreme Court. In its 1896 decision, the Court upheld segregation. Stating that “separate but equal” facilities for the two races did not violate the 14 th Amendment. The Plessy decision legalized segregation for the next 60 years.

Second Class Citizens? The rules of social behavior in the south also reinforced the lower status of African Americans. When African Americans refused to go along with these social mores, there would be consequences. The worst outcome from such a situation was lynching.

Lynching Lynching – an extrajudicial execution, often by hanging, carried out by a mob to right some perceived wrong. Between 1882 and 1968 there were 4,743 lynching in the US. 79% of lynching deaths occurred in the south.

Washington v. Du Bois Attempts by African Americans to fight racism followed one of two approaches. Booker T. Washington Accept segregation for now Improve situation by acquiring farming and vocational skills. Founded Tuskegee Institute to provide those skills. W. E. B. Du Bois Strive for FULL rights of citizens Founder of the Niagara Movement for equal rights (1905) This was the basis for the modern NAACP.