Essay On The Jim Crow Era

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Although, the 13th, 14th and 15th amendment freed African Americans from slavery and allowed them to become legal citizens, most white Southerners refused to allow freed slaves to enter white society. After the Civil War, Federal troops were stationed in the South ensure peace and equality between Blacks and Whites. When the troops left, white southerners began enforcing harsh de jure segregation laws or Jim Crow Laws. Segregation occurred in schools, libraries, buses, trains, drinking fountains and most other public establishments. Segregation in the voting system was a particularly controversial issue. In the legal regards segregation was referred to as ¨separate but equal¨ in reality ¨Blacks Only¨ facilities were almost always inferior …show more content…

The south continuously passed unethical segregation laws also known as Jim Crow Laws. The laws ranged voting laws to segregated schools but they all had one thing in common, to deny blacks their rights. The absurd voting laws were put in place to make sure blacks in the south could not vote therefore, the government was lacking in representation of black people. In the legal systems eyes the laws were called “separate but equal” but in reality African Americans were considered far from equal. There were many organizations designated to harming black people, groups such as the KKK, The Mississippi Red Shirts and many more. Thankfully, the African-American community refused to be silenced, they created many groups and organizations to fight against the racism and segregation. Arguably, one of the most influential groups was the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). The NAACP got the court to toss out “separate but equal” in the court case Brown v. Board of Education. All in all, Jim Crow Laws were horribly racist laws made by white supremacists and thankfully the United States had many leaders willing to fight against injustice in order to move forward as a

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