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Post Civil War African American Experience

Post Civil War African American Experience. A Quick Survey. Amendment Passed After the Civil War. 13 th Amendment: Officially abolished  slavery in the U.S. Important because started new era in U.S. history. The Reconstruction, 1865-1877.

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Post Civil War African American Experience

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  1. Post Civil War African American Experience A Quick Survey

  2. Amendment Passed After the Civil War 13th Amendment: Officially abolished  slavery in the U.S. Important because started new era in U.S. history.

  3. The Reconstruction, 1865-1877 - After the Civil War, President Andrew Johnson pardoned the South. - Instead, a group of Northern Congressmen, nicknamed the Radical Republicans, began the Reconstruction in the South. - The Congressmen sent federal troops into the South to transform the South.

  4. The Reconstruction Amendments • 14th Amendment: • Requires states to give all citizens due process of law, and gives all citizens equal protection. • Important because states must protect rights of ALL citizens. • 15th Amendment: • Gives ALL citizens the right to vote. • Important because Af Am had legal right to vote, despite Southern restrictions.

  5. Sharecroppers in the South

  6. Sharecroppers in Arkansas

  7. Successes of Reconstruction - Expanded access to education for AfAms - Several Af Am Congressmen and state representatives elected to office - South had roads/railroads built

  8. The Failure of Reconstruction - 1877, end of Reconstruction. - President Hayes pulled troops out and Southern governments established a system of segregation. - The Ku Klux Klan and other white supremacists used terrorist tactics to intimidate Af Ams.

  9. Lynching Murdering a person without due process of law; a tactic used to keep whites in power. STATISTICS: - 3445 African Americans were lynched since 1882, when records began to be kept. - Lynching was a public affair, handled by a mob of people.

  10. Voting in the South • Af.Ams made up majorities in the South; to keep power, whites had to restrict their right to vote • Ways that governments disenfranchised (took the vote away) Af.Ams: • - Grandfather Clause • - Poll Tax – economic way to avoid Af.Am. voting • - Intimidation tactics • - Literacy Tests

  11. Streetcar station, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

  12. Definitions: - Jim Crow : The systematic practice of discriminating against and segregating black people in the South. - Segregation To separate, to keep races or ethnic groups apart. Important because Af Ams lived under this system of legal segregation from Reconstruction up until the 1960s. (90 YEARS)

  13. Restaurant, Lancaster, Ohio

  14. Plessy v. Ferguson - Homer Plessy sat in the white section of the railroad car to confront segregation laws. - Instead, in Plessy v. Ferguson, the Supreme Court agreed with segregation’s rules and said it was legal as long as each race got equal treatment. - It took 58 years to overturn this with the Brown v. Board of Ed. case.

  15. Palmer Hayden, Jeunesse (Youth)

  16. Harlem in the 1920s

  17. As a result of the Great Migration North by 1.75 million Af Ams in South: Harlem Renaissance - A period in the 1920s when Af Am achievements in art, music and literature flourished. - Important b/c redefined image of Af.Am. in the U.S., and gave black communities pride in their own abilities.

  18. Archibald Motley, Harlem

  19. DUKE ELLINGTON, musician and composer

  20. ZORA NEALE HURSTON, poet & author

  21. LANGSTON HUGHES, poet

  22. Some changes started to occur in the 1940s: - 1948, President Truman signed Executive Order desegregating the US military. - The NAACP, the National Association for the Advancement of the Colored People, founded in 1909, had legislative successes combating Plessy, preparing them for the Brown case.

  23. Tuskegee Airmen, World War II

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