ipl-logo

Jim Crow And Segregation In The 1880's

897 Words4 Pages

Jim Crow and Segregation
In the 1880’s, there were many restrictions set on African Americans, including the Jim Crow laws. Jim Crow laws were basically restrictions on everything African Americans could or could not do. Jim Crow was a very influential law pursued on men and woman of the same race.
Who really is “Jim Crow?” Jim Crow laws were pursued in mostly all southern states in the 1880’s, legalizing segregation between all races. In the article “The Age of Jim Crow: Segregation From the End of Construction to the Great Depression.” by Jesse Walker Dees and James S. Walter, Dees and Walter state “Jim Crow was the name for a system of laws/customs that imposed racial segregation and discrimination on African Americans from the …show more content…

In the “Age of Jim Crow:...” written by Dees, Jesse Walker and James S. Walker, the two stated facts about the Supreme Court's decisions. In lines 7-8 in the article, Dees stated “The U.S Supreme Court, in its infamous Plessy V. Ferguson decision, put its stamp of approval on such state action(segregation). There were then bans on intermarriage, there were poll taxes, and literacy tests on African Americans who could afford to pay to take them.” This occurred because they knew African Americans wouldn't be able to pay to take them, so in their disadvantages the law would be forced on them right away. On page 6 of the article”Freedom Rides,” Arsenault writes “The influential supreme court ruling, reduced the power of the federal government to interfere in what were considered state or local affairs, allowing states to legislate racial segregation without federal intervention.” In this case, it shows how states could now decide on if they wanted segregation or not instead of their government deciding for them and making the law forceful. Lastly, in the article “Trouble in Mind” By Nikki Brown she states, “Federal acquaintance reflected weariness on the part of northerners of dealing with social issues of the South. By 1910, every former confederate state had enacted laws restricting African Americans political rights,social movement/economic development…” This quote shows exactly the hardship for the African Americans and what they dealt with based of the laws put down on them. Based on the quotes above, the Supreme Court's decisions were harsh towards the other

Open Document