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Mrs. Stoffl 9.9.15
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Objectives Assess how whites created segregation in the South and how African Americans responded Analyze efforts to limit immigration and the effects. Compare the situations of Mexican American and of women to those of other groups.
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African Americans Lose Freedoms Jim Crow laws Failure of Reconstruction and Democrats return to power in the South 15 th Amendment: The gov’t cannot discriminate by “race, color or previous conditions of servitude” for right to vote How did Southerners get around this? Grandfather clauses: Vote if an ancestor had voted prior to 1866 Blacks were slaves prior to 1866 Poor whites could vote
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Stifled at the Polls All white primaries to elect candidates Terror at the polls Number of black voters in LA: 1894 – 130,000 1904 – 1,300 1940 – 3% of blacks in the South could vote
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New Laws Force Segregation Some Southerners initially opposed the Jim Crow segregation on the grounds of convenience. Jim Crow railroad cars, waiting stations, jury boxes, Bibles, cemeteries, restaurants, parks, beaches hospitals… In the North: De Facto segregation Restrictions on housing and work
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Supreme Court Ruling Supports Jim Crow Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) Jim Crow laws constitutional on the basis of “separate but equal” But…$14/white study $3 for black student in 1915
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African Americans Respond “Never return back” Organized into groups Strength Support Share ideas and organize thoughts
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Booker T. Washington Blacks should not focus on ending Jim Crow or segregation Focus on improving their social positions Build up economic resources “Pull themselves up from their bootstraps.” Open businesses, become educated, learn job skills Tuskegee Institute – “industrial education,” vocational education This education would prepare blacks to exercise the privileges of citizenship
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W.E.B. DuBois Criticized Washington’s willingness to accept & accommodate Southern whites Argued that blacks should demand full and immediate equality Voting rights were not a privilege that needed to be earned, they should be freely allowed Burden of achieving equality should not be the sole responsibility of blacks alone
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Ida B. Wells She had purchased a first-class ticket, and the conductor ordered her to sit in the Jim Crow section Which did not offer first-class accommodations. She refused, the conductor tried to remove her, she "fastened her teeth on the back of his hand." Wells was ejected from the train, and she sued. She won her case in a lower court, but the decision was reversed in an appeals court.
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Ida B. Wells Co-Owned a newspaper, Free Speech in Memphis, TN Condemned the mistreatment of blacks Directly attacked the practice of lynching and was forced out of town Wrote 3 additional pamphlets regarding the horrors and terror of lynching, or legalized murder
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Chinese Immigrants Face Discrimination 1879 – CA made it illegal to hire people of Chinese descent Segregated schools for Chinese students White mobs attacked Chinese for “taking” jobs ∴ Congress passes the Chinese Exclusion Act Yick Wo v Hopkins (1886) Sup. Ct. sided w/a Chinese immigrant who challenged a CA law that banned him from owning a laundry business
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Mexican Americans Struggle in the West Land was the problem…Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo protected land of Mexican Americans who lived in the Southwest after the Mex-Am war 4/5 still lost their land Why? Burden of proof put on the Mex-Am’s if disputed b/w them and an American Santa Fe Ring: political group of whites that got the gov’t give them a land grant where 1,000s of Mex- Am lived The area was a territory, not a state, therefore no representation in DC to challenge the deal
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Mexican Americans Fight Back Las Gorras Blancas – fought back by burning homes and cutting barbed wire of white landowners “Our purpose is to protect the rights and interests of the people in general; especially those of the helpless class” Supported by the Knights of Labor who helped publicize the problem Alianza Hispano-Americana Formed in 1894 to protect culture, legal rights, and interests of the Mex-Am.
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Women Make Gains and Suffer Setbacks Right to Vote Susan B. Anthony wondering what happened to women after the passage of the 14 th & 15 th Amendments ○ Betrayed by Radical Republicans National Women’s Suffrage Association ○ Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton ○ Sought a Constitutional Amendment ○ Anthony voted and was tried + convicted
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Step in the Right Direction Increase in the # of women attending college (1/3 rd by 1900) Role in temperance Women’s Christian Temperance Union ○ Frances Willard argued that women needed the vote to ban the sale of alcohol Public health and welfare reform
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Exit Slip – The Sunny South
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