"Segregation in 1930 s america" Essays and Research Papers

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    Segregation and segregation laws After the 13th Amendment passed by the Congress on January 31‚ 1865 ‚slavery in America was abolished. All the Southern States agreed to the 14th Amendment by 1870‚ which guaranteed equal protection under the law to all citizens. Unfortunately‚ this “equal” was only an apparent status. Trough violence a terrorist gang named “Ku Kux Klan” kept black people from voting and supporting the govern ‚ spreading danger and fear. The old white Redeemer govern regained

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    African Americans were treated with discrimination and racial segregation due to the “Jim Crow” Laws which segregated blacks from being at certain places with white people (Civil Rights Movement). This inequality angered many African Americans as they began to protest for their civil rights and equality‚ turning it into the Civil Rights Movement. The fight for freedom was a long and rough journey‚ but they were able to put an end to segregation in public places and banned employment discrimination on

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    American economy and its culture changed dramatically during the 1920’s and 1930s due to many factors‚ including the Great Depression. The Depression itself‚ among other elements such as consumerism‚ national debt overload and the 1930 Banking Crisis all played an invaluable part in the change and sheds light on how America’s economy is run today. The first of these changes after the Depression was the New Deal. In the 1920’s‚ American banks were privately run‚ with the money from their clients

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    reveal/display that World war 2 did not truly advance women’s rights. Women gained more job positions‚ but they were temporary. They received a lower pay‚ and equal pay wasn’t solved until far after ww2. World war one was more influential‚ as well as the 20’s‚ 30’s and post ww2. Before world war 2‚ women were seen as stay at home mothers/housewives (2). The increasing need for women in the military force as a result of men leaving for war‚ created jobs that implements the role of women into

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    a beginning of change in the role of the federal government. Most of his new ideas aimed at creating new jobs almost always require the assistance of government fundings. Because of this‚ the government started spending more and more money in the 1930s than it was recieving‚ this which as a reprocution ended uo creating a huge deficit. Some people during this period‚ believed that the government was now pushing its powers way too far‚ disreguarding what the Federal Government has done and started

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    I n the 1930s the farming was a big boom‚ but as more people came the less and less the nutrients was taken out of the soil. The dust bowl was also known as “the Dirty Thirties” before all the migrants moved to the states the soil was rich and full of nutrients‚ but the states didn’t get much rain to keep the land fertilized. As soon as the immigrants moved they started to plant right away and the soil went from rich and full of nutrients to poor soil and the nutrients were all gone. So the

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    World War 2 / 1930's

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    world war Life in the 1930s Sports: during the great depression‚ people were miserable. There was barley any good news in the papers. The best way to escape being miserable in that decade was sports. The soccer world cup‚ hockey‚ boxing and the summer olympics of 1936 were all great entertainment for the people stuck in the depression Transportation: transportation was different back then from what it is today. They usually used cars or street cars to get from one place to another in a

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    The Mexico of the 1930s was primed for change. While the Great Depression threatened never to end and political instability seemed to run in a ravenous cycle‚ Mexico still smoldered through the 1930s‚ in the aftermath of the Mexican Revolution. Though the Revolution had blitzed through the country‚ leaving death and deepened social turmoil‚ one could posit that a majority of the occurrences of the mayhem were those meant to inspire positive societal change. For example‚ under Francisco Madero‚ the

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    The lack of employment was one of the many effects that occurred during the 1930s. Businesses chose to fire and not hire‚ and continued to do so. They did not have any hope that the economy would better and they planned not to expand their businesses. People could not find jobs‚ and would be lucky enough even if they did. In the article “Firing Not Hiring”‚ it states “Owners and managers lost confidence in the economy. They postponed plans to expand; they reduced production levels‚ laid off employees

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    in the 1940s‚ the second wave of migration caused Los Angeles’s population to skyrocket from 63‚700 to 350‚000 by the year 1960. This mass-migration caused many demographic problems in the new racially diverse city. The first sign of lingering segregation was that Blacks and Hispanics were still not allowed to buy real estate in certain areas of the city‚ even though it was illegal. This caused a completely uneven distribution of race across the city. Another factor in this problem was new house

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