The Civil War lead to a great deal of changes socially as well as politically within the American South. The defeat the Confederacy experienced after the Civil War brought about turmoil, such as increased racial strife, and African Americans were often blamed for the chaos the South underwent after losing the conflict. White supremacists were faced with the possibility of former slaves gaining certain privileges, such as the right to vote, and fought to maintain white superiority. Due to the frightening prospect of African American voters, several individuals within the South responded with anger and violence. However, African American males did receive voting rights, due to the 15th Amendment, which caused certain groups to respond with drastic measures to install fear within the African American population. Most of these measures, such as lynching, were legalized within the Jim Crow laws which kept African American populations living in the South suppressed under racist infrastructures. …show more content…
Throughout the 1960’s, the Civil Rights movement defied white supremacy and the supremacists who fought to uphold Jim Crow laws in the South. A famous example of a challenge to Southern racism would be Brown vs the Board of Education. After the Supreme Court ruled to de-segregate school systems, violence and resistance erupted in the South. Just like during Reconstruction, the federal government had to intervene to protect the rights of American citizens. This research paper will also observe current events, such as the removal of the Confederate Flag from the Capitol building in 2000 and later from the Capitol grounds in Columbia, South Carolina in 2015. These events, along with the public opinion in the 1960’s, demonstrate the feelings of resentment some individuals maintain towards African Americans for a war that was lost, are still preserved within the
When the African Americans joined the Civil War in hopes of having a better and easier way of life and after the war, it was a totally opposite of what they expected. The reconstruction period involved many layers of conflicting interests and goals among the key players: blacks and whites, radical reformers and radical traditionalists, Northerners and Southerners, presidents and legislators, owners and laborers, missionaries and generals. The 13th Amendment of 1865 abolished slavery, the 14th Amendment of 1868 provided equal protection under the law and the 15th Amendment of 1870 allowed all men, regardless of social or financial status, the ability to vote (3). The reconstruction period was revolutionary as the victory of the North, the destruction of slavery, the preservation of the union in legal framework undermined the structure of American Democracy and its
As much as Reconstruction had initially tried to help the South, it was the sole goal of this movement to, “undo as much as possible of Reconstruction.” State facilities originally that were supposed to help everyone were closed down, and the gap between black and white expenditures on schooling increased. Due to the depression in the 1890’s this worsened the situation for black families trying to make a living in the South couldn’t keep up their farms or the places that their children would learn. “In 1900, no public high schools for blacks existed in the South. Black elementary schools, one observer reported, occupied buildings “as bad as stables””. New laws about segregation also affected blacks in more ways than just demoralization, it also showed what kind of jobs were considered good work for them. In the instance of segregation on railroads, “many blacks could be found in “whites only” railroad cars. But they entered as servants and nurses, not as paying customers entitled to equal treatment. The rise of lynching also affected the way blacks lived their lives, by controlling the way they vote, how they treated whites, and how they couldn’t rely on the justice system to address their grievances. An example of the reduced number of voters is best seen in Louisiana, where the number of voters dropped from 130, 000 to 1, 342, which is directly linked to the use of violence as a way to intimidate black voters. Blacks also had to be careful how they acted around white, since murder wasn’t a federal crime and was handled by the state, many blacks were lynched without fair trials and accused of crimes like raping white women, murder, and theft. A majority of the accused never when to trial. All in all blacks in the South were largely affected negatively as a result in policy changes, social factors, and widespread violence. This injustice carried on
Despite nearly one hundred years passing since the Emancipation Proclamation, African Americans in Southern States were still faced with the most distinct forms of racism. The so-called “Jim Crow” laws that were present in United States at the time, served to segregate blacks and whites from all aspects of public life, including schools, public transport and juries. Often faced with extreme right-wing terrorist groups such as the white supremacist Klu Klux Klan, many among the African American community chose to live in a society of oppression that to actively campaign for equal rights for all humans regardless of the colour of their skin. It wasn’t until the 1950’s and 60’s that the people attempted to challenge the established order by engaging in influential protest movements with the help of key activist groups and their leaders. In particular, one key example of a powerful protest campaign was that which occurred in 1965 in Selma, a small town in Alabama. Here, the African American community united in an effort to ensure that all citizens were equal before the law in regards to their ability to register to vote. Their work in banding together and marching from Selma to the state capital Montgomery, was vastly important to both the Civil Rights Movement as a whole, as well as the assurance of the Black vote within the United States. Consequently, this essay seeks to emphasize just how influential this act of protest was to the movement as a whole, whilst analysing the
During the Civil War and the reconstruction period, Congress had been debating over the fact that colored people were denied certain actions in society. For starters, they were denied the certain right to vote. Because of this, Congress decided to create the 15th amendment which allowed African Americans to vote without being denied by the Federal government or state. The state were now becoming anti-slavery due to the North’s winning of the Civil War. Because the South had lost, there was
The Confederate flag has now become a hot issue for South Carolina, which is the last state to have the original Confederate flag still flying on its Statehouse. What got the State’s attention was the economic boycott of South Carolina that was announced on January 1992 by the NAACP to pressure the State to remove the Confederate flag off of its Statehouse in Columbia. The NAACP’s removal request is based on the fact that they, the anti-flag groups, claim that the meaning of the Confederate flag is one of hate and discrimination. On the other hand, there are other groups that believe differently whom are called the pro-flag groups. They claim that the Confederate flag is a sign of heritage
“It forbade all the states to deny the vote to anyone “on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude.” This was the final blow to the southern states, which quickly ratified the amendment. By March 1870 the Fifteenth Amendment became apart of the Constitution. Now taking into consideration the hell that southern blacks were enduring, this short period of time consisted of three Amendments being passed that shed a light on the black population that most blacks at the time had given up on. Congress gave the opportunity for blacks to step out of slavery, accept citizenship, and take the power to vote and change the way the south had been ran. “The Radicals had at last succeeded in imposing their will on the South, Throughout the region former slaved had real political influence; they voted, held office, and exercised the “privileges” and enjoyed the “immunities” guarantied them by the Fourteenth Amendment…The spectacle of blacks not five years removed from slavery in positions of power and responsibility attracted much attention at the time and has since been examined exhaustively by historians.”
In the wake of the Civil War, the 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments were ratified which abolished slavery and in theory granted people of all races the citizenship rights, equal protection, and suffrage that society owes them. However, that did not stop a wave of backlash policies from passing especially in Southern states that felt their way of life was threatened by the newfound independence of black Americans. These laws served to perpetuate racism and white privilege, and further divide the racist,
In a progressive society like the United States, looking to the past is common, to learn from our mistakes but some undeniable issues of the past repeat and are omitted from our society because of their unpleasant nature, a great example of this is the Jim-Crow Era. In this paper, I will be discussing the main events of the Jim-Crow era, its initiation, the new style of slavery in the south, and the way it re-shaped the lives of African Americans all across the country, its re-enforcement in the beginning of the twentieth century, its major supporters, like the Ku Klux Klan. Confederate state leaders, and its major oppositions like the rise of the Civil Rights Movement, and the idea of the United States setting a global example of
Reconstruction affected American society through the creation of Anti- African American and Republican hate groups, economically due to the rise of sharecropping, and politically when it came to freedmen holding office. Union’s pursuit for social reform in the South involved the passing of new amendments guaranteeing freedom for blacks and the Freedmen’s Bureau, which caused the upheaval of opposition for black rights. The Fourteenth Amendment gave African Americans equal rights and the creation of the Freedmen's Bureau aimed to educate freedmen. Many Southerners were infuriated with the rights former slaves were gaining, and the Ku Klux Klan arose from the hatred. Reconstruction also changed the nation’s economy with the abolishment of slavery, and it prompted the granting of land to freedmen, which turned into the development of sharecropping. The Thirteenth Amendment abolished slavery and land was given to the former slaves. Sharecropping soon became an essential part of the Southern economy. Reconstruction affected Southern politics by the passing of amendments and military power, but it triggered aggression toward African American leaders and voters, which eventually lead to the discriminative South. The Fifteenth Amendment gave African American the right to vote, but Southern government issued literacy and property qualifications for voter in hopes of blocking black vote. In the 1876 election, blacks were prohibited from voting in the south with armed force. The Presidency was decided after Rutherford B. Hayes promised to remove federal troops from the South. This move guaranteed white supremacy in the South for the coming years. Due to the aforementioned, Reconstruction undoubtedly changed
In a speech to Congress, Benjamin Boyer said “… the Negroes are not the equals of white Americans, and are not entitled … to participate in the Government of this country.” While the 15th amendment ensured that African Americans could not be denied the right to vote just because they were black, the South came up with various ways to prevent them from doing so. The Ku Klux Klan terrorized African Americans and were only killed under their control. They prevented them from voting, which led to a democratic revival in the South (Doc.
The Thirteenth Amendment of 1865 abolished slavery, the Fourteenth Amendment of 1868 granted African Americans citizenship and equal protection under the law, and the Fifteenth Amendment of 1870 granted African Americans the right to vote. These amendments were passed in an effort to combat racism and reshape public perception of blacks, however, these laws were hard to enforce and Southern states developed their own laws like the Black Codes to control the newly freed slaves. Jim Crow-era laws in the South like the poll tax and literacy tests prevented many blacks in the South from voting. Anyone who tried to break Southern traditions was subject to violence and intimidation from the Ku Klux Klan.
In 1865, the United States government implemented what was known as Reconstruction. Its’ purpose was to remove slavery from the south, and give African-American’s the freedom in which they deserved. However, the freedom that they deserved was not the freedom that they received. With documents like The Black Codes restricting them from numerous privileges that white people had and the terroristic organization known as the Klu Klux Klan attacking and killing them, African-American’s were still being oppressed by their government as well as their fellow man. Slavery may have been abolished, but African-American’s were not yet given the freedom and rights that their white counterparts took for granted.
Those who felt threatened by the massive amount of African-Americans who would now be participating in the government criticized this Amendment, which allowed all male citizens the right to vote regardless of race. Ex-Confederates, many of which were not allowed to vote after bitterly losing to the north, argued that African-Americans were not ready to vote because they were ignorant to the political system of the U.S. The political power of the south would be in the hands of the formerly oppressed, as opposed to their oppressors, who would be practically powerless. The debate on this topic would cause more tension in southern society, which was already undergoing a difficult period of adaptation. Another problem which arose in the south were laws which would further the oppression of the African-American population. Commonly called Black Codes, these laws also punished white persons who supported emancipation during the Civil War. These Black Codes were often unreasonable or unneeded to keep order within society. They were simply created as bitter retaliation by the ex-Confederates who were not pleased by the integration, which had just taken place. Black Codes were created and enforced on a State level which became superior to the Fourteenth Amendment. The laws would be psychologically damaging to the African-American population, who would be forced to feel
African Americans had been made citizens after the Civil War in 1865 and also freed from slavery. But still white people, primarily in southern states, continued to use a variety of methods to prevent any African Americans from using their right to vote. Houses were burned down of those who had voted and threats and beatings were instilled. Literacy tests were also used, ironically in a time period when most people
Progressively voting rights of blacks started to vanish. In 1898 The Supreme Court went further in William Vs. Mississippi, a Mississippi law intended to prevent black voting. This gave the green light to southern states to have voting rules. Beginning in 1890, blacks were denied the right to vote by violence, literacy test, grand-father clause, property tax, white primacy elections, purges, former prisoners, and poll tax. Whites used violence to intimidate blacks, and prevent them from voting. Blacks received threats, were beaten, sometimes even lynched. Even sometimes their houses were burnt down. Also, many blacks didn’t receive education, and couldn’t read