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Published byGeorgina Carroll Modified over 9 years ago
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Post Civil War African American Experience A Quick Survey
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Amendment Passed After the Civil War 13 th Amendment: Officially abolished slavery in the U.S. Important because started new era in U.S. history.
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The Reconstruction, 1865-1877 - After the Civil War, President Andrew Johnson pardoned the South. - Instead, a group of Northern Congressmen, nicknamed the Radical Republicans, began the Reconstruction in the South. - The Congressmen sent federal troops into the South to transform the South.
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14 th Amendment: Requires states to give all citizens due process of law, and gives all citizens equal protection. Important because states must protect rights of ALL citizens. 15 th Amendment: Gives ALL citizens the right to vote. Important because Af Am had legal right to vote, despite Southern restrictions. The Reconstruction Amendments
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Sharecroppers in the South
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Sharecroppers in Arkansas
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Successes of Reconstruction - Expanded access to education for AfAms - Several Af Am Congressmen and state representatives elected to office - South had roads/railroads built
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The Failure of Reconstruction - 1877, end of Reconstruction. - President Hayes pulled troops out and Southern governments established a system of segregation. - The Ku Klux Klan and other white supremacists used terrorist tactics to intimidate Af Ams.
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Lynching Murdering a person without due process of law; a tactic used to keep whites in power. STATISTICS: - 3445 African Americans were lynched since 1882, when records began to be kept. - Lynching was a public affair, handled by a mob of people.
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Voting in the South Af.Ams made up majorities in the South; to keep power, whites had to restrict their right to vote Ways that governments disenfranchised (took the vote away) Af.Ams: - Grandfather Clause - Poll Tax – economic way to avoid Af.Am. voting - Intimidation tactics - Literacy Tests
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Streetcar station, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
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Definitions: - Jim Crow : The systematic practice of discriminating against and segregating black people in the South. - Segregation To separate, to keep races or ethnic groups apart. Important because Af Ams lived under this system of legal segregation from Reconstruction up until the 1960s. (90 YEARS)
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Restaurant, Lancaster, Ohio
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Plessy v. Ferguson - Homer Plessy sat in the white section of the railroad car to confront segregation laws. - Instead, in Plessy v. Ferguson, the Supreme Court agreed with segregation’s rules and said it was legal as long as each race got equal treatment. - It took 58 years to overturn this with the Brown v. Board of Ed. case.
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Palmer Hayden, Jeunesse (Youth)
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Harlem in the 1920s
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As a result of the Great Migration North by 1.75 million Af Ams in South: Harlem Renaissance - A period in the 1920s when Af Am achievements in art, music and literature flourished. - Important b/c redefined image of Af.Am. in the U.S., and gave black communities pride in their own abilities.
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Archibald Motley, Harlem
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DUKE ELLINGTON, musician and composer
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ZORA NEALE HURSTON, poet & author
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LANGSTON HUGHES, poet
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Some changes started to occur in the 1940s: - 1948, President Truman signed Executive Order desegregating the US military. - The NAACP, the National Association for the Advancement of the Colored People, founded in 1909, had legislative successes combating Plessy, preparing them for the Brown case.
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Tuskegee Airmen, World War II
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