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John Lewis Experiences

Decent Essays

By the middle of the century, one-fifth of Pike County’s 16,000 populaces were African Americans-all of them but ten were slaves. In 1813, General Zebulon Montgomery Pike, who John Lewis said never set foot in Pike County, got killed in a battle in Canada. After his death, ten counties decided to honor his name by establishing counties- including Alabama which created Pike County in 1821. The experiences of John Lewis helped to enhance my understanding of pre-Civil Rights African American life in the south by showing me that Pike County had their similar shares of cultural brutality; moreover, just as other counties in the deep south had. Furthermore, I learned that after the Civil War African Americans’ life in the South improved gradually.
Much of the deep south, but especially the Pike County and surrounding counties were rural but gradually begin to develop with time. John Lewis described Pike County’s landscape as small communities alongside dirt roads with rolling hills. Before Pike County’s founding in 1821, there was a small-scale number of African Americans residing there. In the 1820s there was a major shift in the area’s populace when the …show more content…

There were two local churches in Pike County named Dunn’s Chapel in addition to Antioch Baptist Church were burned. The two churches symbolize worshipping which the whites did not believe should be a common practice for African Americans. The African Americans went to their place of worships as a symbol of hope and freedom for what is to come. There were also signs of lynching and whitecapping which is the practice of threatning property-owning African Americans until they abandond their property. Many African Americans were forced to undergo these conditions because they were seen as property rather than people. Many of them did not have choice but to live through these harsh conditons for the saftey of themselves and their

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