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Analyzing the Issues and Songs of African Americans During the Great Depression
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Assess the impact of a reform movement on minority populations and political affiliations. How can rights be denied to citizens of a democracy? How do the arts help us gain historical empathy? How are the arts an agent for social change? Essential Questions
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Jim Crow America
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African Americans Hardest Hit by the Great Depression Most vulnerable to fluctuations in the economy- black businesses and their communities affected immediately Unemployment rate double that of whites
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Sharecroppers Price of cotton plunges from 18 cents to 6 cents a pound. 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 excluded from unions (job and wage security) Blacks relegated to “Negro Jobs” Faced competition from unemployed whites Approximately ½ of African Americans out of work
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Relief Rolls Soar 25-40% of African Americans in urban areas on relief Discrimination in starvation Retrieve American democracy through political influence
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Reconstruction 13 th Amendment 14 th Amendment 15 th Amendment
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Rights Denied
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Northern Black Voters
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Democrats
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AAA Cash benefits for crop reduction > landlords keep money PWA Federal public works> black hospitals, community centers, buildings at black colleges BUT African Americans did not secure employment in certain localities CCC Employment of young men, conservation> strict segregation, 200,000 African Americans work and receive education, illiteracy eliminated 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 relief and employment > wage differentials Social Security Old age assistance, unemployment benefits > agricultural and domestic workers excluded, African Americans failed to qualify
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Constructs Purpose Step Behind the Author Journaling/Notetaking Letters to FDR
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FDR’s “Black Cabinet” Appointed larger number of blacks than previous presidents “Black brain trust” Advisers on “Negro affairs” 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 the New Deal
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Lynching Definition American Lynching Culture Historical Developments Types 1882-1968 Statistics* 4,743 Americans lynched 3,446 African Americans *Provided by Archives at Tuskegee Institute
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A Lynching in Marion, Indiana, 1930
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Eyewitness Accounts
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Anti-Lynching Crusader: Ida B. Wells
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Anti-Lynching Crusader: NAACP
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The Arts: Agent for Social Change
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“Strange Fruit”
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“A Song for a Dark Girl” Langston Hughes
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Liberty and Justice for All? The Scottsboro Case
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The Trials
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A Mass Movement
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The Arts Respond
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“Scottsboro Boys” Leadbelly
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Scottsboro Limited Langston Hughes
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To Kill a Mockingbird Harper Lee
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Assess the impact of a reform movement on minority populations and political affiliations. How can rights be denied to citizens of a democracy? How do the arts help us gain historical empathy? How are the arts an agent for social change? Essential Questions
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