4/30: Discussing Race Do you believe that Jane
Elliot’s “Brown Eyes/Blue Eyes” 1960s experiment was an effective way to introduce her third-grade students to issues of race and prejudice? Why or why not? Why do you believe that the issue of race continues to be a sensitive one for many people, and how can we encourage an honest, respectful discussion on the history of race relations in the United States?
Reconstruction Even while the Civil War was in
progress, Union politicians had been looking for ways to achieve Reconstruction, bringing the South back into the Union
Some congressional leaders favored a harsh Reconstruction plan designed to punish the South
The Freedmen’s Bureau Aids Southerners Shortly before the war ended,
Lincoln and Congress did agree on the Freedmen’s Bureau, a federal agency designed to aid freed slaves and relieve the South’s immediate needs
The black and white agents of the Bureau delivered food and healthcare and began to develop a public school system for both black and white southerners
It also helped to reunite families separated by slavery and to negotiate fair labor contracts between formerly enslaved African-Americans and white landowners
The Reconstruction South As a condition of readmission to the Union,
all southern states were required to grant the vote to African American men
The South also had to accept the Thirteenth Amendment, which ended slavery in 1865
The Fourteenth Amendment, ratified in 1868, granted full citizenship status and rights to every person born in the United States, including African Americans
Under Reconstruction, many African American men eagerly signed up to exercise their new right of suffrage
By 1868, many southern states had black elected officials
The Fifteenth Amendment, ratified in 1870, guaranteed that no male citizen could be denied the right to vote on the basis of “race, color, or previous condition of servitude”
Freedmen Rebuild Their Lives In the South, formerly enslaved African-
Americans worked to carve out new lives
They assembled their scattered families and built strong churches that also served as community centers, employment agencies, schoolhouses, and – in later years – centers of protest
For the first time, many African American men and women could legalize and celebrate their marriages, set up housekeeping with their families and make choices about where they would reside
Freed women could care for their families and leave field labor
Freed people also realized the importance of learning to read and to count their money – so the Freedmen’s Bureau schools quickly filled
By 1869, as many as 300,000 African American adults and children were acquiring basic literacy
The Ku Klux Klan Uses Terror Tactics Even though the South
remained under military occupation, organized secret societies, such as the Ku Klux Klan, used terror and violence against African Americans and their white supporters
A federal grand jury concluded that the chief goal of the Klan attacks was to keep African Americans from voting
Congress passed federal laws making it a crime go use violence to prevent people from voting
Although Klan activities lessened somewhat, the threat of violence persisted, keeping many southern African Americans from the polls
Separate But Equal During the decades after Reconstruction, southern
states passed laws that separated blacks and whites – these laws were known as Jim Crow laws
In the 1896 case Plessy v. Ferguson, the Supreme Court upheld segregation as long as states maintained “separate but equal” facilities for both races
Yet facilities for blacks almost always were inferior During the same time period, southern states
enacted laws such as poll taxes and literacy tests that stripped blacks of the vote
1920’s: A New “Black Consciousness” Like the immigrants
who traveled from Europe and Asia, African Americans who left the South dreamed of a better future
They had heard stories of economic opportunity, social advancement, and greater political rights
The South, they reasoned, was a dead end
Locked into low-paying rural jobs barred from decent schools, faced with the reality of Jim Crow oppression and the threat of lynching, they looked to move north
Migrants Face Chances and Challenges Most African American migrants to the
north probably found a better life Wages in a Detroit auto plant or a
Pittsburgh steel mill were far better than what a sharecropper earned in the South
In such cities as New York, Chicago, Pittsburgh, and Cleveland, African Americans had a growing political voice
In those towns, there also existed black middle and upper classes
African American ministers, physicians, lawyers, teachers, and journalists practiced their professions and served as role models to the younger generation
But… In coming North, African Americans had
certainly not escaped racism and oppression
On average, they were forced to live in the worst housing and labor in the lowest paying jobs
In addition, as the race riots in the summer of 1919 demonstrated, violence was a threat to African Americans in the north, as well
New York City’s Harlem became the focus for the aspirations of hundreds of thousands of African American
Migrants from the South mixed with recently arrived immigrants from Caribbean islands, such as Jamaica
This dynamic blend of different cultures and traditions bred new ideas
Garvey Calls for Racial Pride The most prominent new
African American leader to emerge in the 1920s was Marcus Garvey
Born in Jamaica, Garvey traveled widely before moving to Harlem in 1916
He came to the conclusion that African Americans were persecuted everywhere
To combat this problem, he promoted the idea of universal black nationalism and organized a “Back to Africa” movement
Unlike Booker T. Washington or W.E.B. DuBois, Garvey did not call for blacks and whites to work together to improve America
Instead, Garvey advocated the separation of the races
By the mid-1920s, Garvey’s Universal Negro Improvement Association boasted almost 2.5 million members and sympathizers
His advocacy of black pride and black support of black-run businesses won considerable support
Garvey’s movement fell apart in the second half of the decade
The federal government sent him to prison for mail fraud and then deported him to Jamaica
Without his powerful leadership, the Universal Negro Improvement Association lost its focus and appeal
Although Garvey’s movement died, his ideas did not fade