“May one day the Crow be executed for blinding the naive and clawing the innocent.” The Jim Crow laws were the laws that separated the rights of colored people and white people. These Laws changed the thinking and course of history with the relationship between blacks and whites forever. In this paper i will discuss the Topic of Jim Crow laws and how they have affected society from 1863 to 1954. It was an extreme struggle during the Jim Crow Era. Many black people suffered from poverty,discrimination, outcast, and even violence. Unfortunately Due to these laws and restrictions many people died because of these laws.
The Klu Klux Klan was a social club that was made in 1865-66 in Pulaski, Tennessee. This club was created by six Confederate veterans. When it was first made the “KKK” was just a secret club at first. But as time went on with this organization it soon became a place for terrorists. The outfits that …show more content…
However in 1963 Martin was unfortunately sent to jail because he and others were protesting the treatment of blacks in Birmingham, Alabama. A court had ordered that Martin King could not hold protests in Birmingham. During his jail time Martin wrote a letter to the Clergymen. His letter told of the hardships of the black people and the struggles of having to obey the chains of the Jim crow laws. This time was of injustice among this situation. The blacks had just as much human rights as whites although the others did not see it so. Martin Luther King Jr. had kept fighting telling the world of being “in an airtight cage of poverty” How heartbreaking it was to tell of their children about these unfair ways that the white people treated them. “Seeing the child distort her personality by developing an unconscious bitterness toward white