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Jim Crow Laws Essay

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After the American Civil War, Congress passed several laws to protect the rights of the newly freed black slaves such as the Thirteenth Amendment that prohibited slaves in the United States. In addition, Congress also passed the Fourteenth Amendment to fortify the rights of freed black slaves in which the Amendment granted the citizenship to all citizens who born in the United States, regardless of races, and the citizens entitled to “equal protection of laws” of the states where they lived.
Despite these Amendments, southern states wanted to maintain the culture of slavery, so they treated these African American differently by passing the law, known as the Jim Crow Laws, that legally prevented and prohibited the blacks from sharing the same public areas with the whites like riding buses, attending school, etc. Because the strict of the law, many colored people started to challenge the unjust law in the court. For instance, the trial of Plessy v. Ferguson in 1982 in which Plessy “who was seven-eight Caucasian, was arrested, according to Louisiana law, because of his refusing of taking the car for blacks only. Acknowledging the violation of the Fourteenth Amendment about the equality between citizens of Louisiana state legislature, Plessy appealed his case through Supreme Court. However, in 1896, the Court upheld the states’ doctrine of “separate but equal” and ruled that the segregation between whites and blacks did not violate the Constitution by the vote of 8-1. In the

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