During the 1800s slavery was established. Slavery was common in the south, however slavery was abolished in several areas such as the North for example. Several African Americans for instance Harriet Tubman, she tried to escape from the South and tried entering the North for freedom and the pursuit of happiness. However this wasn’t any different from the South . Although slavery was abolished in the North, African Americans still had certain restrictions, therefore they were still slaves.…
Between the 1877 and 1920, white southerners were able to cut back many of the rights held by African Americans. Many southerners wanted to guarantee that the African Americans had limited power. Throughout time southerners became very successful that African Americans began to lose hope. African Americans began adjusting their life without rights. Southerners were able to accomplish this by creating barriers to voter registration, lynching, and segregation with evidence from the primary sources to back up my statements. I will characterize relations between blacks and whites during the Jim Crow era as a violent and cruel period in American race. Also characterized by legalized segregation, lynch group, and white power.…
I think it's interesting how you point out the various differences that each of these groups face. The point you make about how Native Americans were more disregarded bring up an interesting argument because it does seem like when reading through a lot of the material in The Ethnic Dimension, a lot of the legislation passed throughout the nineteenth century was to move Native Americans further and further away from mostly white westward developments. To your point about Jim Crow laws and the other challenges African Americans would face, I found that on EveryCulture.com/African-Americans/Misconceptions-and-Stereotypes, that these legal discrimiations would go on well into the mid twentth century and cause so much damage to the African American…
In 1865, through present African American have dealt with an enormous amount of segregation. The 13 amendment was created to abolish slavery, but many states still found ways to keep African Americans away from evolving. When it came to education many African American were forbidden to go to school. Many whites did not want blacks to become educated because they still wanted blacks to view whites as superior. As years went by African American were finally allowed to attend school. However, Many blacks were often bullied out of white schools forcing them to attend black schools that weren’t as financially supported as the white schools were. It was a difficult journey for Blacks to be able to pursue their education. I find it fascinating to…
During the 1700-1800s, slave ships were vile because of what happened before, during, and after the transport. In the fist place, slavers used to capture people of different villages in Africa to use them as slaves. Then, the traders took them to forts where they made the captives wait until the slave ships arrived. The captains normally fit between 500 and 800 slaves in the ships which were going to venture in long trips of several weeks. Once they got to their destination, traders and captains sold the slaves to different traders, to other countries, or to people who had a lot of money to offer for the slaves.…
The 1860's to about the 1890's (Jim Crowe Era) there was a time full of segregation and racism. Most of all, the white were racist and hateful to African Americans. Photograph #5 shows a picture of a group of white kids yelling and ready to fight a group of black people that just moved into their neighborhood. These kids were around the age of 11-12. This showed how much hate people had in them. However, there were some people that were not mean, and they wanted to help African Americans get their rights. Like in Photograph #3, there were a bunch of protesters, white and black, holding up signs that said, "We Demand Equal Rights, we want jobs," etc... In Photograph #4, there are a bunch of African American kids, white adults, and black adults.…
Was an accommodationist approach the best method to gain equal rights for African Americans in the late 19th to early 20th centuries? Equality is a basic human right and needs to be realized for everyone but, unfortunately, it is not and never has been. Throughout history there have been great injustices faced by various groups of people, whether they were based on race, gender, sexuality, or religion. This discrimination has been combatted by brave, strong leaders through various methods.…
2. Once again, the values of the people influence society directly. In the 1800's, women had very little power. In the early 1900's, women made up a little more than half of the population of the United States. As a result of increasingly liberal opinions, the United States government was forced to give the people what it wanted, and granted women the right to vote in the 1920's. The same was seen with the Civil Rights Movement of African-Americans. Deciding that generations of abuse had to end, African-Americans decided to voice their own opinions. Once again, with increasingly liberal opinions, the government gave people what they wanted: desegregation. And it happened yet again in modern times. Homosexuals were not officially allowed to…
In the 1800 there was terrorism against african americans they got lynched, raped, and got there homes set on fire. Many rural blacks at this time lived under a sharecropping system(you give half of your crops to the owner of the land). But at least it was a little better than slavery at least they were free. Over the next 20 years, blacks would lose almost all they got the right from the civil war by the jim crow laws. Jim Crow was a slang term for a black man. Any state law passed in the south had white rules and black rules.. Jim Crow laws were the enbodyment of white supremacy. There were 16 black members in the Louisiana General Assembly so you wouldn’t think they would pass a law to prevent black and white people from riding together…
African Americans before the World War II were fighting for a double victory both at war and at home; they have yet won a fight against the injustice in America. Discrimination was at its highest while lynching rapes, segregation in the workplace and in society were still being reported in the South and North. Many African Americans started their own revolutions they wanted to experience change in their lifetime if not for the next generation . Their fight was not over yet; there was still the fight to claim their self- determination and being able to exercise their citizenship like all other Americans. The actions behind their methods were built on unity, support and community not only with African Americans but also with everyone.…
All American women in the 19th to early 20th century faced social and legal disabilities that forbade women to have the same equal rights as men. Through all the obstacles that made women’s rights achievable were the hardships that influenced historians such as Harriet Tubman, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Susan B. Anthony to overcome the inequality in property rights, family law, and education to allow women fulfill the same opportunities as men that is seen in society today. Women protested and petitioned to get equal rights as men and focused on overturning the barriers that did not allow them to have equal opportunities. In the 19th century, Harriet Tubman believed in equality to all: black or white and male or female. Tubman was a supporter that strived for her freedom as well as the freedom of others.…
Black people made many contributions to the United States in the 1800s. They faced discrimination, but they always tried to make life better for other Black people and themselves. They had booming businesses, fought for education rights, and even helped start the gold rush. Black people had almost no rights.…
No matter seeing all the usefulness and benefits of having African Americans around. Till this day African Americans are still being treated as if they are second class citizen and it is disgusting. Caucasian’s with higher power mistreated African Americans due to their ignorant ways. In 1890 was when the Color line era began. The Color line was the segregation of races in the South. White people in control and black people being treated as lesser human being. It was when white democrats, the southern state and the local government. With them in charge they that overturned the political and social gains that black had made in progression after the Civil War. Black people did nothing but sit there and accept their fate in the South. With them losing their rights to vote and becoming second class human being as if other people are better just because of their skin color. White people were the ones sin charged, holding the guns, and had all the power. They had the law behind on their side. In the text The Color Line in the Era of Segregation it states “A variety of ingenious…
I believe every person was born the same. You should not discriminate against African Americans because they have a darker skin color. I don't believe having us to do your work is fair. I don't think you would want us to push you around and tell you what to do while we sit around. We all needed to be treated equal. I hate that people can throw us around, tell us what to do, and get away with it. Slave owners do not provide us with proper education. They beat us with whips and other things. They give us little to no money. I don't think slave owners need to be nicer, or give us more money. I think slavery should stop.…
In the past years within the United States, black people were treated as an inferior race to the white community. This was seen from the actuality that African Americans were subjected into the world of slavery (Ager…