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Extending Rights, Part II
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Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

Jan 01, 2016

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Page 1: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

Extending Rights, Part II

Page 2: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

Resolving the slavery question

• “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress

• abolition movement• resistance by pro-slavery groups• Scott v. Sandford (1857)• Civil war (1860-65)• Emancipation proclamation (1863)• Amendments 13 (1865) 14 (1868) 15 (1870)

Page 3: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

13th Amendment (1865)

Page 4: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

13th Amendment (1865)

• There will be no slavery in the U.S.• People can only be forced to work without pay

if they have been proven guilty of a crime through a fair trial.

• Congress can pass any laws necessary to make sure that this amendment is followed.

Page 5: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

So what is the status of ex-slaves?

Page 6: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

So what is the status of ex-slaves?

- Born in the U.S.- But Supreme Court had ruled that slaves and

their descendants were not and could not become citizens…

Page 7: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

14th Amendment (1868)

• All people born in the U.S. (or who are accepted through the naturalization process) are citizens of the U.S. and of the state where they live.

Page 8: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

14th Amendment (1868)

• All people born in the U.S. (or who are accepted through the naturalization process) are citizens of the U.S. and of the state where they live.

• States cannot restrict or violate the rights of citizens in any of these ways:

Page 9: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

14th Amendment (1868)

• States cannot restrict or violate the rights of U.S. citizens in any of these ways:– By passing laws that limit or disregard their rights – By taking away their life, their freedom or their

property – unless they have been proven guilty of a crime through a fair trial

– By unfairly or inconsistently applying laws to them (for example, respecting the rights of some but not of other citizens).

Page 10: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

14th Amendment (1868)

• Equal Protection Clause:If a law exists, states must apply it fairly and equally to all citizens. States are not to pick and choose who can benefit from the protections granted to citizens under state or federal laws.

Page 11: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

14th Amendment (1868)

• Since there are no more slaves, the way the population of each state is counted for the purposes of representation in the House of Representatives and for federal taxation also needs to be redefined.

Page 12: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

14th Amendment (1868)

• Section 2: From now on, all persons will be counted as “whole” persons (except for Native Americans – still left out of the equation), for purposes of representation in HR and taxation.

• If states do not allow eligible voters – male citizens 21 yrs and up – to vote, then the population count will be adjusted accordingly (an ineffective threat: hard to enforce and statistically insignificant).

Page 13: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

14th Amendment (1868)

• Voters = MALE citizens 21+ yrs• This language infuriated advocates for

women’s suffrage, who had hoped their own right to vote would be affirmed here.

• Disagreement about how to respond introduced a split between women’s rights advocates slowed down that movement.

Page 14: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

14th Amendment (1868)

• Also addressed some issues left by aftermath of Civil War:

• Section 3: Former officials who supported the confederacy cannot run for office (unless Congress pardons them).

• Section 4: War-related debts incurred by the U.S. gov’t can be repaid with taxes, but debts and losses by confederates will not be reimbursed.

Page 15: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

14th Amendment (1868)

• And the refrain?

Page 16: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

14th Amendment (1868)

• Congress has the right to pass any laws needed to ensure that this amendment is followed.

Page 17: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

15th Amendment (1870)

• Citizens cannot be prevented from voting because of their race, color or because they used to be a slave.

• Congress has the power to enforce this…

Page 18: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

15th Amendment (1870)

• The wording again infuriated advocates for women’s suffrage.

• Why not add a word…?• Citizens cannot be prevented from voting

because of their sex, race, color or because they used to be a slave.

Page 19: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

15th Amendment (1870)

• “’Tis the Negro’s hour…”

– If there is one disenfranchised group that needs the vote most, it is African-American men.

• Who has the power to decide who gets the right to vote and if this amendment passes?

Page 20: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

Reconstruction (1865 – 1877)

• Period of putting society back together again after the war

• Period of progress and hope for African-Americans– Some participate in writing new constitutions for

southern states– Some vote and a few are elected to office– Some manage to move to new places and start

new lives

Page 21: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

Reconstruction

• Progress for African-Americans depends on support from the federal government

• Once federal troops leave the south in 1877, Southern states and white leaders promptly revert to treating African-Americans as second-class citizens

Page 22: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

Ways of asserting white supremacy

• Creating obstacles to voting: poll taxes, literacy tests, grandfather clauses

Page 23: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

Ways of asserting white supremacy

• Creating obstacles to voting: poll taxes, literacy tests, grandfather clauses

• Passing and enforcing “black codes” (state laws and local ordinances): limits to what African-Americans can do in court (cannot testify against whites or serve on juries), in job market, unequal penalties if arrested, sunset laws controlling movement, residence, etc.

Page 24: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

Ways of asserting white supremacy

• Creating obstacles to voting: poll taxes, literacy tests, grandfather clauses

• Reviving and enforcing “black codes” (pre-existing state laws and local ordinances): limits to what African-Americans can do in court (cannot testify against whites or serve on juries), in job market, unequal penalties if arrested, sunset laws controlling movement, residence, etc.

• Ensuring economic advantages: share-cropping, preferential hiring, poor access to education, etc.

Page 25: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

Asserting white supremacy

• Passing new laws to create racial segregation in public: public facilities, transportation, public accommodations, schools, hospitals, even cemetaries! (“Jim Crow” laws)

• Passing anti-miscegenation laws: to forbid or penalize relationships and marriages between whites and non-whites

Page 26: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

Asserting white supremacy

• Passing laws to create racial segregation in public: public facilities, transportation, public accommodations, schools, hospitals, even cemetaries! (“Jim Crow” laws)

• Passing anti-miscegenation laws: to forbid or penalize relationships and marriages between whites and non-whites

• Resorting to violence and intimidation: lynching, Ku Klux Klan, other desperate and irrational acts

Page 27: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

1890s challenges to Jim Crow laws

• Some African-Americans decide to challenge the constitutionality of Jim Crow laws

• Louisiana Separate Car Act (1890)• A test case: Homer Plessy – Well-dressed, “passes” for white (1/8 AfAm)– Sits in “white car”– Arrested and files lawsuit: state laws do not

protect him equally (14th amendment)

Page 28: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)

• Plessy’s claim is denied by lower level federal courts, but makes it to the US Supreme Court

• Sup Ct rules:– Separating people by race does not deny anyone

equal protection under the law as long as the facilities provided are equal

– “separate but equal” legal justification for continued racial segregation

– soon, the issue of equality was not even backed by the federal courts

Page 29: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

• Consequences of Plessy v. Ferguson?

• Clear that the Supreme Court was going to interpret the 14th Amendment very narrowly, and would turn its back on abuses by states and individuals.

• Increased segregation throughout U.S., continued violence against African-Americans.

Page 30: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

Response by African-Americans?

• Great Migration of African-Americans from south to northern cities

• 1910 NAACP is formed, to fight racial segregation and second-class citizenship through the courts

• World Wars I and II: African-Americans enlist and serve, despite segregation, violence and contradictions in US positions on democracy

Page 31: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

Legal victories?

• 1930s Supreme Court rules that a handful of African-American applicants to white public law schools must be admitted

• 1954 Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka

Page 32: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

Brown v. BOE (1954)

• Supreme Court finally rules that racial segregation in schools is inherently unequal and detrimental to the academic and psychological growth of the children who are not allowed into “white” facilities

• “Separate is not equal” (never has been, never could be) Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) is overturned.

• Public schools must desegregate “with all due speed.”

Page 33: Extending Rights, Part II. Resolving the slavery question “compromises” in 1787 constitution and laws passed by Congress abolition movement resistance.

Brown v. BOE (1954)

• Knowing that the Supreme Court is willing to back up the 14th Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause gives new life to the civil rights movement.