Life Under Jim Crow• Beginning in the 1880’s Southern states and cities began passing laws requiring racial segregation
• separate train cars for blacks and whites (challenged later in Plessy)
Also:required segregation in:
hotelsrestaurantsparksand every facility open to the public
Atlanta even required separate Bibles to swear on for blacks & whites
Booker T. Washington• son of enslaved parents
• hired by the state of Alabama in 1881 to run Tuskegee Institute (vocational school)
• farming, forestry, plumbing, sewing, nursing
• believed blacks could achieve economic prosperity, independence, and respect of whites by succeeding in these fields
• urged blacks to give in to white racism and not challenge Jim Crow laws (accommodation)
• many agreed, saw economic rights as being more important than winning the vote
W.E.B. Du Bois• opposed to Washington’s meek acceptance of humiliating discrimination
• born in 1868, raised in a free family in Mass.
• 1st African American to receive a Ph.D. from Harvard, taught history and social science at Atlanta University
• founded the NAACP in 1909
• called for blacks to demand equality at once
• key to equality was the vote… not economic
• with the vote would come political power to end lynching, provide better schools for children, challenge white domination of society
Supreme Court Decisions in 1950
• RR dining cars in South must provide equal service
• black students couldn’t be segregated within a school
• “intangible factors” had to be considered (not just buildings and books
Chief Justice Earl Warren
“We conclude that in the field of public education the doctrine of “separate but equal” has no place. Separate educational facilities are inherently unequal”
Unanimous Decision on May 4th 1954
"African Americans and White Americans have faced similar problems when wanting to participate in politics."
Southern ManifestoSigned by 100 members of Congress “to resist forced integration by any means”
“ I don’t believe you can change the hearts of men with laws or decisions.”
President Dwight D. Eisenhower
Resistance to Brown
Southern states passed morethan 450 laws aimed at preventing enforcement ofthe Brown decision
MLK’s Arrest• sit-in in Atlanta department store
• ruled violation of probation for driving without a license
• sentenced to four months of hard labor on Georgia chain gang
• JFK an RFK intervened on King’s behalf
Educating Black VotersDifficult Tests
Misspelled Words
Omissions
SNCC (student nonviolent coordinating committee)• effective in organizing• brought violent response from white
segregationists
“Letter From Birmingham Jail”
“…For years now I have heard the word “Wait!”It rings in the ear of every Negro with piercingfamiliarity. This “Wait” has almost always meant“Never.” We must come to see…that “justice toolong delayed is justice denied.”
- Martin Luther King “Letter from Birmingham Jail,” 1963
June 11, 1963
JFK announces he will send Congress a civil rights bill thatwill deliver crushing blows tosegregation
Medgar Evers
University of Alabama
June 11, 1963• court order requiring the admission of two African American students
• head of Mississippi NAACP• killed by a white sniper
24th Amendment
prohibits conditioning the right to vote in federal elections on payment of a poll tax or other types of tax.