black civil rights ALL Flashcards
(124 cards)
when was slavery abolished
-1865 congress passed the 13th amendment to the constitution abolishing slavery in the USA
what was the 14th amendment and when did it occur
-1868
-made all people born of natrulaised in the us, us citizen
what was the 15th ammendment and when did it occur
3rd Feb 1870
-declared that all US citizens had equal voting rights
what was the position of black people after the amendments
-supposedly by 1870 all black americans were ‘free and equal’
-however despite 15th ammendment black voters were met with violence (e.g Fannie Harmer went to register to vote in missisippi 1962 but was sacked from her job as a result)
-this shows the difference between the existence of law and its enforcement (de facto and de jury)
what were conditions like for black people after WW1, why dsid they need to fight for civil rights
-after ww1 black Americans found they still faced a struggle for equality. There was discrimination segregation and violence
-this was worse in the south but even in the north, minorities were unofficially segregated and discriminated against
-were last hired first fired
-anti black race riots occured in the south
-wilson introduced segregation in the white house in 1913
why was life like for black americans in the south post ww1
-faced legal restrictions, violence and lower quality living
-lynchings from KKK
-significant unequal pay and restricted job options
-Jim crow laws introduced in 917 segregated white and black people (seperate toilets, schools, restraunts, places to sit etc)
-dramatic difference in quality of education
-booker T washkingto advocated for accepting segregation and had a huge following of white people
what and when was plessy Vs Ferguson
‘seperate but equal’ law in 1896
what was life like in the north post ww1 for black people
-expected to live in their own part of town, segregated from rest of city
-expected to do the lowest paid jobs, last hired first fired
discrimination reached the gov
who introduced segregation in gov offices and the white house and when
1913- president Wilson
what was voting like for black people after 15th ammendment
-given harder literacy tests, had to be home owners which they were not
-polls often surrounded by white mobs
what were jim crow laws
-introduced laws of segregation, ‘seperate but equal’
-state and local laws that enforced racial segregation, operating primarily in the south
-many christian ministers believed that white people were the chosen people and black people were cursed to be servants and that god supported racial segregation
-belief that black people were innately, intellectualy and culturally inferior to white people
FEATURES
-segregated transport
-segregated living areas
-segregated public facilities
-workplaces segregated workers to the point of different staircases to go on
how did jim crow laws effect voting rights
-voters had to pass a literacy test (black people didnt have access to good education and had low literacy rates as a result)
-cultivated a predominantly white voting body in the USA
-in these literacy tests black people were sometimes given harder passages to read and in many. states voters had to be home owners, most blacks werent which the gov was aware of
-white mobs surrounded voting polls to make racial attacks
what was lynching and why did it occur
-some whites felt segregation wasnt enough and that black people needed terrorising into obedience
-happened mostly in the south
how many lynchings occoured of white vs blck men between 1915 and 1930
-65 white men
-579 black men
what was the criteria for lynching a black person
-did not need to have committed a crime or an accusation
-black people often wrongly accused of a crime as an excuse to Lynch
what was the culture of lynching in the south
-often advertised beforehand
-photographs of crowds of men and women grinning happily beside corpses (was an event of leisure)
examples of injust lynchings
-1955, 14 year old Emmett Till visited relatives in south Chicago. He was lynched for merely talking to a white woman- allegedly asking her for a date
-he didnt understand the southern rules as he came from the north where measures were more mild
-this lynching attracted alot of publicity and shock, even in the south
what was the KKK and when was it founded
-brutal white supremacist organisation revived in 1915
-against any non-WASP group but especially black people
-by 1925, estimates of membership ranged from 3 to 8 million (even state governors and policemen)
-hid identity with whitw hooded cloaks but many knew the identities of the members
-created an extreme anti black environment that non clan members felt too scared to reject
-reduced quality of life of black people by creating terror.
how did the federal government hinder black equality
voting literacy tests
plessy vs ferguson ‘seperate but equal’
what was plessy vs Ferguson
1896
supreme court ruled that segregation was possible despite the 14th ammendment if the provision was ‘seperate but equal’
hindered black people economically socially and politically due to unequal oportunities that segragation gave
how did presidents intervene with segregation and violence
-wilson had no problem with segregation
-harding spoke out against lynching and was in favor of civil rights
-adressed 30,000 people at university of alabama of the evils of segregation
-BUT both harding and coolidge were committed to laissez faire so they didnt take any legal action/ legislation
how did the great depression effect civil rights intervention
-federall gov focused on correcting economic struggles, abandoned focus on civil rights
when and what was the great migration
-1917-32
-wave of black migration from the south to the north and east, mainly to cities (chicago/ Detroit)
-drawn to cities as they were mostly industrial towns providing work opportunities
-also to escape violence and discrimination of the south the have a better standards of living in all ways.
how did migrants spark race riots between 1917-19
closer proximity of blacks and white living together in north caused race riots