This paper will examine the harms caused by segregation laws in the United States (and in Canada) by analyzing Jim Crow laws restricting voting of Black Foax and the formation of the violent terrorist group, the KKK (Ku Klux Klan), and it will illuminate how these laws were dismantled by the actions of the Deacons. Segregation laws in the United States, or Jim Crow laws, meant that different rules were in place for Black and Wwhite people (“A Brief History of Jim Crow'', 2022). Jim Crow laws came to form, which meant that the state laws in the south would be different for Black and White people. Among many laws that were changed included rules regarding the right for a Black person to vote. Two years after the Jim Crow law was passed the court …show more content…
Voting numbers of Black voters went from “130,334” to “1,342” in the population (“A Brief History of Jim Crow'', 2022). Policies and practices entrenched in institutions including education, health care, and justice that reflect and promote prejudice, stereotyping, and/or discrimination against individuals of Black-African descent are known as anti-Black racism (Meszaros, 2023). These rules regarding voting were set out for white supremacy to strive and be the superior race giving them full authority over who gets to be in power. For example, the rule stating “grandfather should have voted”, is complete discrimination as most of them were enslaved, not allowing them to vote (“A Brief History of Jim Crow'', …show more content…
The KKK was able to uphold segregation even in the civil rights movement era, they commanded fear among Black individuals by scaring them with their “night rides”' '. These night rides consisted of driving through Black people's neighbourhoods, Throwing fire crosses in their front yards, along with shooting and brutally beating Black people. Tthe notion (ideology) that white people are superior to people of colour in terms of their ideas, thinking, beliefs, and behaviour (“The Deacons”, 2016). Our institutional and cultural presumptions that give the white group importance, morality, righteousness, and humanity while demeaning persons of colour and communities of colour are constant manifestations of white supremacy (Meszaros, 2023). The KKK was able to scare civil rights protesters and the Black majority from raising their voices against white people in fear of themselves or their families being targeted. This caused segregation laws to still be apparent even in the civil rights
Ferguson decision allowed segregation to spread in America. The Supreme Court’s support of “separate but equal” made segregation more acceptable. Jim Crow Laws and segregation were so widely spread, that every state knew about them, and adopted them. “Any state, Brown continued, could exercise laws that separated people based on race if it was ‘reasonable.’ The court also gave legal precedent for the states to self-regulate what was ‘reasonable’ or not.”
This demonstrates the KKK’s brutal treatment of African Americans after the war. The KKK wanted to maintain dominance and slavery; therefore, they began to terrorize African Americans as well as Republicans. Individuals who publicly supported blacks were additionally attacked. The KKK heavily demonstrated white supremacy due to their loss in the Civil War. Certainly, the fall of the Confederacy negatively impacted many Southerners, so other racist groups similar to the KKK formed alike efforts throughout this period.
People of color did not fully get the right to vote until 1965, compared to white males as well as white women of the time, who could vote way before they could. Women's right to vote came early in the 1920s, compared to women of color, who were given the right to vote through plenty of blockages as well as clauses. This essay covers the Voting Rights Act of 1965 as well as the effects it has on plenty of citizens today. The first paragraph covers the Voting Rights Act of 1965 as well as life as well as social norms before this act was passed. The second paragraph covers how the Voting Rights Act of 1965 was passed as well as how it was possible to be passed.
Carlen Belen Tineo Dr. Kareen Williams History 1201-09 February 20,2022 Brown v. Board of Education After the Civil War slaves did receive their freedom , however they did not expect the how the laws would prevent to improve their live qualities after being slaves. The government created laws that affected negatively the people of color. In the past, Jim Crow laws enforced racial segregation between white and people of color in America. This law had the country divided into two groups, the most affected were the people of color.
In the 1950s America found itself facing the deep-rooted issue of racism, specifically toward African –Americans. Slaves were freed and people were declared equal, equality was not always prevalent. Segregation remained in much of the country. This meant people groups such as blacks had were forcefully separated from whites in schools, transportation, hospitals, and more. Particularly in the South, segregation had a strong hold on society. This began to change as supreme courts re-evaluated segregation laws, especially in schools.
White supremacists affected segregation and discrimination extremely. Their actions made segregation and discrimination worse for African Americans and harder for them to handle. White supremacist groups such as the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) used violence in order to control and make African Americans’ lives worse (splcenter). The KKK would lynch, flog, beat, burn, shoot,
Contemporary Segregation in the United States Sam Kenney Despite the abolition of slavery in the United States with the thirteenth amendment in 1865, Black Americans as well as other minority groups continue to face prejudice to this day. Following the end of slavery, there was a period of legal segregation that was upheld by the supreme court ruling in the Plessy vs. Ferguson case of 1896 in which racial segregation was deemed to be legal as long as it was “separate but equal”. This was finally overruled by the Civil Rights Act of 1964 which outlawed segregation in all sectors of the United States. The Civil Rights Act is effective to this day, but there is still segregation throughout the United States both in education and within communities.
KKK’s Negative Impact on Civil Rights Anthony Earwood English 1 The Ku Klux Klan's impact on the Civil Rights Movement was significant, as the group's use of violence and intimidation tactics, opposition to desegregation and racial equality, and influence on the political and social climate of the United States had a profound effect on the advancement of civil rights in America (Southern Poverty Law Center, 2023). Firstly, the Ku Klux Klan's use of violence and intimidation tactics had a chilling effect on the Civil Rights Movement. The group often targeted African Americans who were advocating for their rights, as well as white individuals who supported the movement (National Humanities Center, 2023).
Blacks were denied the right to vote by grandfather clauses (laws that restricted the right to vote to people whose ancestors had voted before the Civil War), poll taxes (fees charged to poor Blacks), white primaries (only Democrats could vote, only Whites could be Democrats), and literacy tests ("Name all the Vice Presidents and Supreme Court Justices throughout America's history"). Plessy sent this message to southern and border states: Discrimination against Blacks is acceptable. The Jim Crow laws and system of etiquette were undergirded by violence, real and threatened. Blacks who violated Jim Crow norms, for example, drinking from the White water fountain or trying to vote, risked their homes, their
Segregation went back in history even after Civil War days of slavery. At this time, in history African were fighting for their freedom. Caucasians felt that African Americans should be inferior to white people, and they saw no reason why to respect black people or why to educate them. Noble facts of history were given by the early 1800 's Northern states had abolished slavery (Osborne 6). Due to the Confederate state losing to the Civil War in 1865 that same year, the Thirteenth Amendment had gotten approve for slave owners to free their slaves.
The creation of the white racial hierarchy had to occur in order to categorize the United States, preventing disorder . However, because of the terrible creation of “acceptable terrorism” in America, the inequitable racial structure created by the rich white male, and the unjust atmospheres where black citizens experienced social injustices because of the melanin in their skin, it is apparent that white supremacy groups, like the Ku Klux Klan, in the United States had a negative impact on the communities of color, especially Africans & African-Americans, within the American society. In America, white supremacy was terrible, with its humanitarian threats toward the public. When placed under different conditions and white bias, the creation of acceptable
The ruling thus lent high judicial support to racial and ethnic discrimination and led to wider spread of the segregation between Whites and Blacks in the Southern United States. The great oppressive consequence from this was discrimination against African American minority from the socio-political opportunity to share the same facilities with the mainstream Whites, which in most of the cases the separate facilities for African Americans were inferior to those for Whites in actuality. The doctrine of “separate but equal” hence encourages two-tiered pluralism in U.S. as it privileged the non-Hispanic Whites over other racial and ethnic minority
Even though the African-Americans were facing segregation and prejudice,
In 1928, the knights of the Ku Klux Klan took five of their former members to court for operating falsely outside of the organization. The Klan’s hopes were to convict the former members of treason, but instead, the judge exposed many of the organization’s crimes. The exposed crimes included the kidnapping of a three year old who was never found, the beating of an African American man at a deadly riot, and the starting of the Carnegie riot by the Klan’s Imperial Wizard, because his request to have a demonstration was denied (prologue.blogs.archives.gov). This court case shows the ruthlessness of the Ku Klux Klan, and their violent determination to be supreme. Their actions directly affected an African American’s life, on a day to day basis.
The task of this assignment was first of all to explain the relationship between the colored and the white races in the Southern States of America from 1900 to the 1960’s. To investigate this, I used different kinds of literature and a few sources of history. Through these materials it was clear that this relationship between the colored and the white races was unequal and the colored race was discriminated by the whites. The Jim Crow-laws created a systematic racial segregation in the Southern States and it required the Civil Rights Movement from around 1955 to 1968 to do something about this. Martin Luther King was among others a leader of the non-violence movement which fought for civil rights for the colored race through sit-ins, boycotts