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Jim Crow Laws Essay

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Section 1: What happened when the Jim Crow laws were first created? When the Jim Crow laws were first created, they were supposed to make racism legal in our country, even though there were laws protecting all races of people. The government tried to pass laws for a long time to prevent black and white races from interfering with each other, legally. As research says, “The Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. constitution, adopted in 1866, guarantees that no state may ‘abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States’” (Brown V. Board of Education Topeka, Kansas). The Fourteenth Amendment interfered in creating laws to separate white and black people, this would put a pause on the plan of racial segregation. The amendment …show more content…

The black people were forced to sit in the back and had to give up their sit if a white person wanted to sit in their seat.
Integration of the races was still around until late 1877 when they become much harsher and crueler over the next few years after this. For instance, most schools were still integrated until 1877 (Encyclopaedia Britannica). The first few laws were that black people could not get married to white people or a fine of $50 must be paid or three years in jail, black students could not attend white schools and black people could not be in a one mile radius of the school (Wikipedia). The laws became so strict that in some states if you were 12% African American or having blood relation up to a third generation to an African American that the laws applied to you (Wikipedia).
The African American population was hit extremely hard with the Jim Crow laws when they were first began to be enforced upon people. They had to create a new lifestyle and try and not get fined or arrested for everyday events. Section 2: What was life like to live during the Jim Crow laws? Life as an African American person during the Jim Crow law times was a depressing and hard time for all of them. The laws were accepted, not with open arms, by the African American people. Through the 1880s and 1960s the laws expanded into more detailed and harsh laws (The Jim Crow laws- a brief summary).
The Jim Crow

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