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CHAPTER 9 KEY TERMS BLACK SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC PROGRESS
PAGES 324-3251. philanthropists2. Booker T. Washington3. W.E.B. Dubois4. Niagara Movement5. vaudeville6. yellow journalism7. poll tax8. segregation9. grandfather clause10. Jim Crow Laws11. lynching12. Plessy v. Ferguson13. NAACP
Booker T. Washingto
n
WEB DuBois
List characteristics and information to describe his approach.
List characteristics and information to describe his approach.
Booker T. Washington WEB DuBois
•Founded the Tuskegee Institute•Instructed his students to focus on political equality through economic security by gaining vocational skills•Felt Blacks could achieve acceptance by succeeding economically
•1st African American to earn a Ph.D. from Harvard•Encouraged African American’s to be leaders•Encouraged African Americans to seek advanced liberal arts education rather than vocational.•Founded the Niagra Movement•Became a leader of the NAACP
Black Social and Economic Progress - Pages 324-325 -- List characteristics and information to describe their approach.
Booker T. And W.E.B.by Dudley Randall
“It seems to me,” said Booker T.,“It shows a mighty lot of cheekTo study chemistry and Greek
When Mister Charlie needs a handTo hoe the cotton on his land.
And when Miss Ann looks for a cook, Why stick your nose into a book?”
“I don’t agree,” said W.E.B.
“If I should have the drive to seekKnowledge of chemistry or Greek,I’ll do it. Charles and Miss can lookAnother place for hand and cook.Some men rejoice in skill of hand,
And some in cultivating land,But there are others who maintainThe right to cultivate the brain.”
“It seems to me,” said Booker T.,“That all you folks have missed the
boatWho shout about the right to vote,And spend vain days and sleepless
nightsIn uproar over civil rights.
Just keep your mouth shut, do not grouse
But work, and save, and buy a house.”
“I don’t agree,” said W.E.B.,“For what can property avail
If dignity and justice fail?Unless you help to make the laws,
They’ll steal your house with trumped-up clause.
A rope’s as tight, a fire as hot,No matter how much cash you’ve got.
Speak soft, and try your little plan.But as for me, I’ll be a man.”
“It seems to me,” said Booker T. –
“I don’t agree,” said W.E.B.
Jim Crow Laws
Firs t appeared in
Massachusetts in the 1830's
Became firmly established in the Southern States after
Reconstruction
Required the separation of blacks and whites in schools ,
parks, public buildings and
public transportation
Declared legal by supreme court in
Plessy v. Ferguson
Battled against by the
NAACP
PLESSY V.
FERGUSON
Background of the case:
In 1890 Louisiana passed a law ordering railroads in the state “to provide equal but separate accommodations for the white and colored races.”
Railway personnel were responsible for assigning seats according to race.
June 7, 1892Homer Plessy, a native of Louisiana, who could “pass” for white agreed to the test case so he sat in in the white section and was arrested
He was tried and found guilty of violating the law
He appealed to the Louisiana Supreme Court and then to the US Supreme Court.
Constitutional Issue:
13th Amendment- The segregated society that the south
had created contained the essential features of the slave society before it.
14th Amendment–The segregated society denied him
“equal protection of the law”
What is it?
What is it?
The Decision:
8 out of the 9 judges denied his appeal. Justice Henry Brown wrote the Majority
opinion stating that their decision was based on: Does not violate the 13th amendment because
“a legal distinction between white and colored races… has no tendency to destroy the legal equality of the two races”
Does not violate the 14th Amendment because the amendment “was not intended to give Negroes social equality but only political and civil equality” and the court cannot enforce social equality.
Simply stated – court can’t make us all
be friends
In his famous dissenting opinion, John Marshall Harlan attacked the constitutionality of the Louisiana law and argued that while the law may appear to treat blacks and whites equally, "every one knows that the statute in question had its origin in the purpose, not so much to exclude white persons from railroad cars occupied by blacks, as to exclude colored people from coaches occupied by or assigned to white persons.“
Harlan saw the Constitution as “color-blind, and neither knows nor tolerates classes among citizens.”
Plessy v. Ferguson
= Separate but equal
SEPARATE BUT EQUAL will be the law of the land for over
50 years.
AFRICAN AMERICANS AND WOMEN
DURING THE GILDED AGE
African American Men:
In the South, by 1908 there were no more black state representatives
By 1900, there was only one Southern black Congressmen in Washington
By 1885- there was noticeable public discrimination in theaters, restaurants, hotels, etc. in the South.
Disenfranchisement of blacks begins (literacy tests, poll taxes)
1883- legal segregation begins in the South lynchings average around 190 each year some men became lawyers, doctors,
professors and wealthy business owners educated and wealthy blacks could go to
Harvard, Yale, Columbia, as well as many other universities
Women: “Women’s God-given role, if to be stated, is as wife
and mother, keeper of the household, guardian of the moral purity of all who lived therein.”
95% of married women stayed home in 1880-1890 had little outside contact of the home; often had a
servant who went to market and did all outside chores
rose around 4:30 and did chores (cooking, cleaning, keeping fire, sewing, wash, etc.) until 8:00
women were measured by how happy their husband was, how moral their children were and how clean, neat and organized your home was.
Wear a corset: this exerted 22 pounds of pressure on internal organs, which often caused collapsed lungs and displaced livers.
Could go to a few male colleges but were segregated and told that they “could not maintain the academic rigor of the male population.”
All-female colleges began that offered varied courses but upon graduation women found it difficult to get a job as anything else besides secretary, nurse, or teacher.
1890 Writing Assignment We have studied Plessy v. Ferguson, and glimpsed at the
condition of both African Americans and women during the Gilded Age. In one paragraph tell me, if given the choice, would you have rather been an African American man or a white woman in the year 1890 and why. You must choose one and you must give REAL, VALID arguments to back your position.
Use your Plessy v. Ferguson notes, notes on men & women during the Gilded Age, Chapter nine of your textbook and the notes to support your answer. While you must include historical proof, you may also include some of your own sociological observations on race and gender.