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Published byJacqueline Eades Modified over 9 years ago
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The Gilded Age Creating American Apartheid
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Race Relations in Transition 1865 – 1890 White “Redeemers” tolerated a lingering black voice in politics Through the 1880s, politics remained open and democratic 64% of eligible voters (black & white) participated in elections Blacks remained in elective office oSouth Carolina until 1900 oGeorgia until 1908 South sent black legislators to Washington every election but one through 1900 Disfranchisement remained inconsistent & largely a local issue oOccurred mainly through fraud and intimidation oOccurred often enough to ensure white domination
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Minimizing the Black Vote Gerrymandering There are two principal strategies behind gerrymandering: ●maximizing the effective votes of supporters ●minimizing the effective votes of opponents. Packing, is to place as many voters of one type into a single district to reduce their influence in other districts. Cracking, involves spreading out voters of a particular type among many districts in order to reduce their representation by denying them a sufficiently large voting block in any particular district.
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Gerrymandering
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Race Relations in Transition (1865 – 1880s) Whites showed no great haste in erecting barriers of racial separation. Segregation appeared before end of Reconstruction in some areas Schools Churches Hotels & rooming houses Private social relations Discrimination more sporadic in places of public accommodation Trains Depots Theaters Restaurants
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Lynch Law A form of mob violence and putative justice, usually involving the illegal hanging of suspected criminals. A terrorist method of enforcing social domination. Characterized by a summary procedure ignoring, or even contrary to, the strict forms of law. Victims of lynching have generally been members of groups marginalized or vilified by society. 1882-1968 – 4,743 lynchings [3,446 blacks] Texas ranks third with 352
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Lynching across Time
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Lynching by State Alabama48299347 Arizona310 Arkansas58226284 California41243 Colorado66268 Delaware011 Florida24257282 Georgia39491530 Idaho200 Illinois151934 Indiana331447 Iowa17219 Kansas351954 Kentucky63142205 Louisiana56335391 Maryland22729 Michigan718 Minnesota549 Mississippi40538578 Missouri5369122 Montana82284 Nebraska52557 Nevada606 New Jersey011 New Mexico33336 New York112 North Carolina1585100 North Dakota13316 Ohio101626 Oklahoma8240122 Oregon20121 Pennsylvania268 South Carolina4156160 South Dakota270 Tennessee47204251 Texas141352493 Utah628 Vermont101 Virginia1783100 Washington25126 West Virginia202848 Wisconsin606 Wyoming30535 Total1,2943,4424,736
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Lynching in Texas Paris - 1893 ^ || <= Waco - 1916
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Colored Men of Texas Report of the Committee on Grievances at the State Convention of Colored Men of Texas – 1883 Reaction to the Supreme Court decision that struck down the Civil Rights Act of 1875 as unconstitutional. Drafted prior to the national convention in Kentucky. Whites pretended to accept blacks change in status: oWhites never fully accepted changes oWhites offered to accept changes as a condition to regain former positions in the Union
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Colored Men of Texas Report of the Committee on Grievances at the State Convention of Colored Men of Texas – 1883 Mack Henson A.R. Norris J.N. Johnson J.Q.A. Potts “… the degree to which any right is enjoyed as a citizen is measured by the willingness of the whole body of citizens to protect such a right; if there is a lack of regard there is, therefore, the lack of will to protect.”
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Colored Men of Texas Report of the Committee on Grievances at the State Convention of Colored Men of Texas – 1883 Miscegenation Free Schools Treatment of Convicts Railways, inns and taverns Juries
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Ida B. Wells (1862-1931) Campaigned for women’s rights Campaigned for black equality Outspoken opponent of lynching (A Red Record – 1895) Helped found NAACP (1909)
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The Mississippi Plan 1890 Four components: 1. Residency requirement 2. Convicted criminals disqualified 3. All taxes had to be paid before voting 4. Literacy requirement
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Segregation by Law Judicial retreat created legal climate for Jim Crow laws The Slaughterhouse cases (1873) Limited application of 14th Amendment Concluded most rights of citizens remained under state control U.S. v. Cruikshank (1876) Gutted the Enforcement Acts Ruled only violations of rights by states, not individuals, fell under federal purview Civil Rights Cases (1883) Invalidated Civil Rights Act of 1875 Ruled that unequal treatment prohibitions of 14th amendment only applied to states, not private businesses
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Plessy v. Ferguson 1896 Most important civil rights case of the 19 th century Louisiana law required railroads to maintain separate cars for blacks & whites Concerned black residents of New Orleans launched a test case Railroad a willing participant Homer Plessy refused to move to the “colored only” section & was arrested, tried, & found guilty Case wound up at the Supreme Court High Court upheld Louisiana law Established “separate but equal” doctrine
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Jim Crow Laws
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Birth of a Nation Released in 1915 Presented a negative picture of Reconstruction Portrayed the KKK as heroes Encapsulated dominant historical view of the time Vigorously opposed by Wells, Du Bois, & others Helped shape national attitudes on race Contributed to the rise of the second KKK in 1915
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Booker T. Washington (1856-1915) Political leader, educator, author President of Tuskegee Institute Publicly urged accommodation w/ whites (Atlanta Compromise – 1895) Privately funded legal challenges to segregation
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W.E.B. Du Bois (1868-1963) Harvard graduate (1890) Civil rights activist - Advocated confrontation w/ whites to achieve equal rights Author The Souls of Black Folk Black Reconstruction Helped found NAACP (1909)
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Exodusters Many Blacks migrated West to avoid repression
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