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Brief Summary: The End Of The Jim Crow Law

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After 250 years of slavery in America it finally comes to an end. However, it didn't go quit well as African Americans wanted it to be. In 1865 nearly four million African slaves were supposed to be free, however white southern resisted that African Americans gained equal rights. The majority of whites were unhappy to see African Americans free because they would've have no more workers to work for them in their farms and treat them like an animal. Even though they had freedom, they were still separated and unequal from white Americans. Even though the Jim Crow Law stated that African Americans were supposed to be separated but equal to white but that is not what happened. They were still separated and still unequal when they get on the bus …show more content…

They were also afraid that their privileged lifestyle will be abruptly ended because African-Americans who they termed black,dirty and filthy will now have equal rights and privilege like they do as stipulated in the 14th Amendment. Some of them saw it as unnecessary because they believed the African Americans were comfortable with sharecropping their farms with them, and it seemed to them that granting them equal right like they the white men do means trying to make them white which was totally impossible. Not minding that the 14th Amendment granted equal rights,citizenships and equal protection of the law was passed and signed into law. Most Southern Whites made their own laws which is Termed "Jim Crow" laws which oppressed and made it impossible for African Americans to live comfortable in the Southern states like normal American Citizens that they are. Not until the passage of major civil rights legislation in the 1960's, African Americans were subjected to these Jim Crow laws, some southern states still forced blacks to sit in the back of the bus, different train coaches and also different movie theaters. There was also serious discrimination in different public spaces. It took the Braveness of advocates like Dr. Martin Luther king to speak out against these oppressions, oppressions like harsh voting requirements which attracted serious repercussions if they make any slight

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