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Segregation In The 1930's

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Segregation In The 1930's
The Merriam Webster Dictionary states that the word segregation means “to cause or force the separation of (as from the rest of society)” (“Segregating”). American society has for decades segregated African-Americans from their White counterparts. Even today, with equal rights for all, there are many ways that people are segregated in their daily lives. However, today’s segregation is nothing compared to the 1930’s America. The laws in the 1930’s made African-Americans feel the weight of segregation in their daily lives and education.
America’s laws of the land help to make segregation an acceptable way of life in the 1930’s. This was especially true in the South. The Jim Crow laws were some of the foundational laws to allow segregation.

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