The Great Migration.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Reasons for Increased Immigration
Advertisements

African Americans: Path to Civil Rights. Lesson Objective: Today we will analyze the INJUSTICES of African Americans in the United States up to World.
Sympathy By Paul Laurence Dunbar
The Slave Ship by J. M. W. Turner. THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR AND EMANCIPATION In 1863, during the American Civil War ( ), Lincoln issued the Emancipation.
Harlem Renaissance. What It Was Harlem Renaissance –A flowering of African American art, literature, music and culture in the United States led primarily.
Reconstruction of Virginia and the South Reconstruction – The period following the Civil War in which Congress passed laws designed to rebuild the country.
The Great Migration and the Harlem Renaissance The Rebirth of a New Image.
Unit III: The Progressive Movement I: Social Reform: (Great Migration, Urban Poor, Women’s Rights, Workers Rights) II: Political & Economic Reform III:
The Great Migration T. Dana deMink. Goals This activity is for a high school level English Language Arts class. This presentation is about The Great Migration.
L14: The Great Migration and the Harlem Renaissance (1910s-1920s
Social & Political Problems of African Americans Gilded Age Unit 2 Lesson 3.
 Harlem Renaissance. What is it? The Harlem Renaissance was a flowering of African American culture which was expressed through –Paintings –Music –Dance.
The Rise of segregation. Discrimination:  What is it?  To make a difference in treatment or favor on a basis other than individual merit.
African-American History Part 1: 1619 through the 1930s.
AFRICAN AMERICANS MOVE NORTH. NAACP – National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
Chapter 17 Section 3 “A promise of Freedom.  At first, the Civil War was not a war to end slavery. But, once soldiers got down to the south and saw slavery,
Black Civil Rights Introduction. Background In 1619, nineteen Blacks stepped ashore at Jamestown, Virginia. During the next 250 years, some.
African American Population Increases Detroit experienced a 600% increase in its African-American population during the war and a 200% increase immediately.
The Harlem Renaissance. Warm-Up What was the Great Migration? What is a renaissance?
The Great Migration From the South to the North.
The Great Migration Mr Serra US History. What was it? The great Migration was the movement of more than 6 million African Americans from the rural South.
Seeds of Civil Rights Notes What message did early Civil Rights leaders give to African Americans?
Harlem Renaissance Definition. Harlem Renaissance: African-American civil rights activists employed the artists and writers of their culture to work for.
Great Migration/Harlem Renaissance Mr. Williams 10 th Grade U.S. History.
The Civil Rights Era Reconstruction and Jim Crow Chapter 28 Section 1.
Rise and Fall of Cotton Timeline  During the Antebellum period and Civil War “cotton was king.”  After the Civil War sharecropping began, but cotton.
Struggle for Rights in the Progressive Era
“Freedom” helps The North.
The War Between the States
I.The Great Migration A. What was the Great Migration?
US History Goal 7.03.
Harlem Renaissance.
Reconstruction The time after the Civil War ( ) the country was being rebuilt. Have you ever had a bad breakup and then wanted to get back together?
Harlem Renaissance.
The Great Migration.
“Mrs. Flowers” from I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings By: Maya Angelou
Unit 5: Life in Post-Slavery America (1875 – 1928)
Segregation & Discrimination at the turn of the century
How Amendments have Extended Suffrage
Great Migration/Harlem Renaissance
The Harlem Renaissance
The End of Reconstruction and the Rise of Jim Crow Laws
Reconstruction of the South
Slavery in American History ( )
Reconstruction Chapter 3 – Section 1.
The Emancipation Proclamation
Jim Crow & Plessy V. Ferguson
The Origins of the Civil Rights Movement
Jim Crow and Segregation
The End of Reconstruction and the Rise of Jim Crow Laws
Section 4-The Harlem Renaissance
What was the number one killer for soldiers in the Civil war
African-American Discrimination and Segregation
Reconstruction
Civil Right Study Guide.
Understanding historical events related to To Kill a Mockingbird
Civil Rights Notes From icivics.com.
Bell ringer Describe Harlem, NY.
Civil Rights Study Guide.
We are in our assigned seat, with Our phones put away
We are in our assigned seat, with Our phones put away
African-American Discrimination and Segregation
Reconstruction of Virginia and the South
The End of Reconstruction and the Rise of Jim Crow Laws
The Great Migration.
The End of Reconstruction and the Rise of Jim Crow Laws
The Harlem Renaissance
US History Goal 7.03.
The Harlem Renaissance
Warm-up Match the following!
Presentation transcript:

The Great Migration

Goals This presentation is about The Great Migration. It provides the historical background of events leading to The Great Migration, and is the introduction to a unit on The Harlem Renaissance.

What is the Great Migration? The Great Migration was a massive relocation of African Americans from the rural Southern states to cities of the North. The First Wave: 1910 to 1930 (1.6 million people). After 1930 the migration slowed down a bit because of the Great Depression (1929 to the early 1940’s). Second Wave: 1940 to 1970 (5 million people). The U.S. entered the Second World War in 1941.

They came from… Alabama Mississippi (To name a few States…) Louisiana

And went to… New York St. Louis As well as Chicago, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Cleveland Detroit

Why is the Great Migration Important To This Class? This is our lead into The Harlem Renaissance (1918 to 1937), the most influential movement in African American artistic/cultural history. The Great Migration provides the historical background for our next writers. This information will also lead up to the play, “A Raisin in the Sun.”

Why did African Americans leave the South?

Let’s Go Back in the Time Machine… The Emancipation Proclamation was signed in 1863. Four million people, poor, displaced, and mostly illiterate, are free but homeless.  

The Civil War did not end until 1865 (it started in 1861) The Civil War did not end until 1865 (it started in 1861). Some “freedmen” ran to the Union army for protection. The Union army didn’t know what to do with these “refugees,” it could barely care for its own troops. Many freed slaves died of diseases in the Union stockades.  

  Many took to the roads in search of work, sometimes traveling over mountains with little more than their clothes

Despite their apparent freedom, African Americans received little protection in the South. To a certain extent, they took one step forward and two steps back. Reconstruction was a failure… The Civil Rights Act of 1875 guaranteed African Americans equal treatment in public places, public transportation, and prohibited exclusion from jury service. The law was hardly ever enforced and The Supreme Court decided the act was unconstitutional in 1883.

The Journey African Americans traveled by train, boat, bus, car, and even in horse drawn carriages. Travelers were segregated in public transit waiting rooms and en-route. African American travelers could find little to eat or drink on their stops. The journey was long and slow. Many stopped to find work along the way. This was called “step migration.”

Did they have a “Happily Ever After?” Not Exactly… The Migration created housing shortages in urban areas. Banks limit lending to Blacks. Migrants lived in tenement housing. During this time Harlem became the “Black Mecca.” “Separate But Equal” (Jim Crowe system 1876-1965) becomes common-place. They were snubbed by existing White immigrant labor groups because they are willing to work for a lower wage.

But it was also a time of opportunity… But it was also a time of opportunity….many Southerners flourished in the North Many go to college in the North and become professionals. An African American middle class is established. Jazz music, and other African American artistic expressions blossom and become part of “main-stream” culture. This period is known as the “Harlem Renaissance.” African Americans begin to “organize”. This period sees the establishment of NAACP in 1909 under the leadership of W.E.B DuBois; the National Urban League (which worked to give employment training to those immigrating from the South.); and the “Back to Africa Movement.”

1. One reason for The Great Migration was: They were running away from slavery It was too hot in the South They didn’t want to farm anymore The economic instability of the South.

YOU WERE PAYING ATTENTION! GREAT!

…In the words of Paul Laurence Dunbar in his poem entitled “Sympathy” (1899) “I know why the caged bird sings, ah me, When his wing is bruised and his bosom sore, -- When he beats his bars and he would be free; It is not a carol of joy or glee, But a prayer that he sends from his heart’s deep core, But a plea, that upward to Heaven he flings— I know why the caged bird sings!”