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Analyzing the Issues and Songs of African Americans During the Great Depression
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What effects can a reform movement have on a minority population and their allegiance to a political party? How can rights be denied to citizens in a democracy? How does music help us gain the ability to view the world as it was seen by the people in the past ? How can music be an agent for social change? Essential Questions
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Reconstruction 13 th Amendment 14 th Amendment 15 th Amendment
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Rights Denied Voting Rights Denied Literacy Tests Voter Registration Denied Evictions from tenant farms for trying to register or vote Poll Tax Terrorism Effects
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Jim Crow America
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African Americans Hardest Hit by the Great Depression Very vulnerable: black businesses and communities affected immediately by ups and downs in the economy Unemployment rate: 2X >whites
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Sharecroppers Price of cotton plunges from 18 cents to 6 cents a pound. Drop in farm income. 2/3’s of black farmers earn no income or go into debt
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Black Labor: “Last Hired and First Fired” Black workers could not join unions (job and wage security) Blacks workers face discrimination. Hired for “Negro Jobs” only. Black workers face competition from unemployed whites Approximately ½ of African Americans unemployed
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Relief Rolls Soar 25-40% of African Americans in urban areas on assistance Discrimination in starvation Take back American democracy by getting involved in politics
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Northern Black Voters
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1932 Election: Democrats Control the Presidency and the Congress
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Constructs Purpose Step Behind the Author Journaling/Notetaking Letters to FDR
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AAA Cash benefits for crop reduction BUT landlords keep money PWA Workers build public spaces. Black hospitals, community centers and buildings at black colleges built BUT African Americans not hired in certain areas CCC Jobs for young men doing conservation work BUT 200,000 African American workers strictly segregated. Workers receive education, illiteracy down First New Deal Programs: Intentions, Limited Impacts for African Americans
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Second New Deal Programs: Intentions, Limited Impacts for African Americans WPA Provide assistance and employment BUT African American paid lower wages Social Security Old age pensions and unemployment benefits BUT agricultural and domestic workers excluded, many African Americans failed to qualify
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FDR’s “Black Cabinet” Appointed larger number of blacks than previous presidents “Black brain trust” Advisers on “Negro affairs” African American employment in the federal government: 50,000 in 1933 200,000 in 1946 Mary McLeod Bethune, Director of the Division of Negro Affairs for the National Youth Association
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Eleanor Roosevelt
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African Americans React to America During the New Deal “His Spirit Lives On”- Big Joe Williams “Sylvester and His Mule Blues” – Memphis Minnie “Bourgeois Blues” – Leadbelly “Jim Crow Train” – Josh White
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What effects can a reform movement have on a minority population and their allegiance to a political party? How can rights be denied to citizens in a democracy? How does music help us gain the ability to view the world as it was seen by the people in the past ? How can music be an agent for social change? Essential Questions
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