Jim Crow in the South 1877-1964. How did we get to Jim Crow? After the Civil War, all slaves were freed. The period of Reconstruction, when African Americans’

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Post-Reconstruction South Unit 4. We will: analyze the post- reconstruction period and see how institutionalized racism developed. ◦ Est. a practice.
Advertisements

Jim Crow & Plessy V. Ferguson
African Americans, I. Segregation and Disfranchisement
SIGNS OF JIM CROW from the Library of Congress Collection Produced by Carole Weatherford Author, Freedom on the Menu: The Greensboro Sit-Ins Co-produced.
Segregation & Discrimination
Unit 1 Topic: Industrialization and Progressivism ( ) Ignited by post-Civil War demand and fueled by technological advancements, large-scale industrialization.
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.
The World of Jim Crow -- chapter 9, section 3 --.
Race Relations in the Gilded Age
After the Civil War, African-Americans faced R.A.C.I.S.M. Chapter 1: An Age More Golden than Gilded?
Reconstruction Ends  Section 4. 15th Amendment  Passed in 1870  The 15th Amendment gave African American men the right to vote.  Women’s rights activists.
Segregation and Discrimination in America
Left Side Notebook Problems FAced. Fear KKK Lynch Laws Jim Crow Laws discriminated Segregation - Plessy v Ferguson Voting Losses Poll tax Literacy test.
Segregation & Discrimination at the turn of the century.
Segregation in the South Race Relations in Post- Reconstruction America.
AFRICAN AMERICANS MOVE NORTH. NAACP – National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
Discrimination and Segregation Against African Americans.
Segregation and Discrimination Changes in American Life Chapter 21 Section 3.
Agenda (th 2/21, fri 2/22)  Bell Ringer – From Section 17.1 in your textbook and P , find 3 more facts, names or examples to add to each column.
The World of Jim Crow -- chapter 9, section 3 --.
The World of Jim Crow.
Resistance and Repression Click the mouse button to display the information. After Reconstruction, most African Americans were sharecroppers, or landless.
Disenfranchisement, Jim Crow, and Plessy v Ferguson
The New South, Social Changes (Social Segregation)
After the Civil War, African-Americans faced R.A.C.I.S.M.
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
W.E.B. Du Bois. Segregation should be stopped now FULL political, civil, and social rights for African Americans.
African-Americans after Reconstruction.  Laws limited freedom for African-Americans Literacy testskept blacks and poor Poll taxeswhites from voting Grandfather.
Great Migration/Harlem Renaissance Mr. Williams 10 th Grade U.S. History.
Discrimination against African Americans History of Racism Racism existed in the US before slavery Led to slavery Grew after slavery ended.
How does the history of racism in America develop?
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.
Segregation & Discrimination at the turn of the century
The Rise of Segregation
19th Jim Crow and Segregation - Chapter. 11, Section 3
The “Jim Crow” South.
Segregation and Discrimination
The New South 13th/14th/15th Amendments:
Great Migration/Harlem Renaissance
6.5: The Rise of Segregation
New South.
Jim Crow & Plessy V. Ferguson
Jim Crow & Plessy V. Ferguson
The “ex-slave was not a free man; he was a free Negro.”
Jim Crow and Segregation
SEGREGATION.
Reconstruction.
The Rise of Segregation
African-American Discrimination and Segregation
Striving for Equality Topic 3.3.
W.E.B. Du Bois.
New South.
Segregation and Discrimination in America
Ch 11, Sec 3: The Rise of Segregation
New South Era
The Rise of Segregation
Life after Reconstruction
Disenfranchisement, Jim Crow, and Plessy v Ferguson
African-American Discrimination and Segregation
Reconstruction & Old Jim Crow
Racism, Discrimination, and Segregation in America
Living in the World of Jim Crow
Chapter 7 – Section 3 The world of Jim Crow..
Discrimination Against African Americans
Presentation transcript:

Jim Crow in the South

How did we get to Jim Crow? After the Civil War, all slaves were freed. The period of Reconstruction, when African Americans’ rights were protected by the military in the South, lasted from In 1877 “Home Rule” began in the South after the U.S. military left

What was the goal of “Home Rule?” During “Home Rule,” southern whites wanted life to return to the way it used to be before the Civil War The primary goal of “Home Rule” was to make African Americans occupy and inferior position in society than whites

Notes Jim Crow was legalized SEGREGATION and DISCRIMINATION in the South. Jim Crow followed the RECONSTRUCTION when the South regained control during HOME RULE and tried to make African Americans INFERIOR to whites.

How did southern whites make African Americans inferior? Jim Crow laws Intimidation (Ku Klux Klan – KKK) Lynchings Supreme Court decision saying “Separate but Equal was Okay” (Plessy v. Ferguson) Take away voting rights of African Americans (literacy test, poll tax, grandfather clause)

Who Was Jim Crow? The "Jim Crow" figure was a fixture of the minstrel (singing, comedy & variety) shows that toured the South a white man made to look like a black man He sang and mimicked stereotypical behavior in the name of comedy (Like Black Face)

What did Jim Crow Look Like?

Highly Racist Jim Crow Picture – from sheet music

Racist Caricatures of African Americans including the “Uncle Tom,” “Coon,” “Pickaninny,” and “Mammy” 1898

What Was Life Like for Southern African Americans during Jim Crow? Stop now to read Virginia Jim Crow Laws WRITE –Pick three the MOST SHOCKING to you. Why are they shocking? Why are they unfair? –What do you think was Virginia’s goal in writing these laws?

What Did the South Look Like During Jim Crow?

Black Man Being Removed from a “White” Train Car

History Class at Booker T. Washington’s All Black Tuskeegee Institute (AB)

“Negro Homes, Chatanooga, TN” 1899

Segregated Theater – Probably White Owned (MISS)

Segregated Movie Theater – Probably Black Owned (1939, MISS)

Segregated Water Fountains

“Juke Joint” tavern and blues music hall (FL, 1941) note police order sign

Prison Chain Gang Newport News, VA 1919

African American Prisoners on Work Detail (no longer in chain gang – this is from the 1930s)

Howard University, DC (1919)

Students Outside of Howard

NAACP Parade 1944, Detroit

How did Southern Whites Intimidate African Americans? Ku Klux Klan (KKK) Nationwide (membership 3 million in 1920) Used terror and intimidation to try keep African Americans “in their place” and to prevent them from challenging Jim Crow –Throw rocks through windows –Burn crosses on lawns –Lynchings

KKK Cross Burning

What is a “Lynching?” Lynching: putting to death by mob action without due process of law (no trial) Term comes from American Revolution, Colonel Charles Lynch held informal trials for Tories and Criminals and then whipped or beat them

What is Important to Know About Lynching? Mobs of white men would lynch African Americans (mostly men) in order to keep African Americans “in their place” Often the mob would blame the black man of raping a white woman –This was usually a lie, if there was a relationship, it was usually consensual between a white woman and a black man (To Kill a Mocking Bird…)

continued The mobs would usually lynch African Americans who were most threatening to them –Smart and talented business people –Handsome or beautiful –Outspoken critics or challengers of Jim Crow

Stop – Watch Slideshow Look For: –What is most common form of lynching? –How old were men/women who were lynched? –Judging from the crowds at lynchings, what kind of an event was it for the town? –Why did people take pictures of lynchings and even make postcards out of them? –Why didn’t the police in the town stop the lynchings?

Causes Of Lynchings, NumberPercent Homicides1, Felonious Assault Rape Attempted Rape Robbery and Theft Insult to White Person All Other Causes1, Total4,743

Leo Frank Jewish factory owner in Georgia who was accused of raping and murdering an employee. Mob got him from jail and hanged him. Innocent. (1913) Attention to anti-Semitism.

Thousands gather at the lynching of Henry Smith in Paris, Texas, 1893.

How was the African American response to Jim Crow? Form own colleges and universities (Howard, Tuskeegee Institute, etc.) Speak out – especially in black newspapers –Ida B. Wells and anti-lynching crusade Challenge Jim Crow in Supreme Court –Plessy v. Ferguson, lost Leave the South – “Great Migration” to the northern cities

Ida B. Wells Outspoken critic of lynching Wrote articles, books, and pamphlets trying to disprove the myth that lynchings were justified - she showed it was lawless racism “The real purpose of these savage demonstrations is to teach the Negro that in the South he has no rights that the law will enforce. Lynchings happened to teach other Negroes that no matter what a white man does to them, they must not resist.”