Civil Rights 1865-1992 Flashcards
The US System of Checks and Balance: P1.
- propose and enforce laws: president and congress
- make foreign treaties: the president
- commander in chief of armed forces: the president
P2:
- can declare laws unconstitutional: supreme court
- can veto (reject) laws: president
- passes federal laws & raises taxes: congress
P3:
- appoints supreme court justices: president
- can conduct investigations into the president’s actions. can impeach and remove: congress
- reviews lower court decisions and cause involuntary disputes between states: supreme court
13th Amendment:
to abolish slavery and involuntary servitude
14th Amendment:
equal protection, civil war debt and citizenship rights
15th Amendment:
allow the African Americans the right to vote
Jim Crow Laws:
- enforced segregation
- from 1880’s to 1960’s
- imposed legal punishments if they:
intermarriage, deal with business owners and public institutions
Disenfranchisement: P1.
- 1877
- 15th amendment prohibited the explicit disenfranchisement bases of race and prior enslavement
- polling taxes: sharecropping taxes $1-$2 a yr. African Americans and the poorer whites
- couldn’t votes one form of disenfranchisement
- no prosecution in any state that held any individual accountable for the failure of taxes
P2:
literacy tests:
- 1890
- where explicitly literacy tests would take place
- African Americans 40%-60% couldn’t vote while whites 8%-18%
- you can clearly see the racial divide
- a literate person couldn’t help the illiterate person to have a chance to vote
Reconstruction in the South:
there were 2 sides:
- opportunities for the African Americans
- Resentment and Violence
Reconstruction:
- 1865-1877
- After the American Civil War
- the African Americans were emancipated and new rights were introduced
- Southern states controlled the federal government and social legislation
NAACP: Martin Luther King
- formed in 1909
programmed to:
1. to abolish segregation
2. the equal rights to vote
3. education for the African Americans
4. the enforcement of the 14th and 15th Amendments
Booker T. Washington:
- born into slavery in 1856
- when emancipated after the Civil War completed education and became a teacher
- Wanted the African Americans the right for gradual change of education ( farming and construction ) and the economical aspect
- formed the Tuskegee Institute in 1890
- wanted blacks to voluntary agree with the social segregation and disenfranchisement in exchange for education
- Northern states were not happy and thought that they would always be subordinate and unfree
- died in 1915
laws that prevented African-Americans the right to vote:
- polling tax
- literacy tests
- property qualifications
- grandfather clauses
Ida B Wells: (1862-1931)
worked actively to oppose lynching
dispelled the falsehood of white women accusing of rape
became a target of the white supremacists after publishing her view why white women aren’t so innocent
was an advocate for African-Americans women 1896 NAACP