Jim Crow Equality

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The struggle for social equality for blacks has always been an uphill battle. They were brought to America for the sole purpose of hard labor. Black people never were meant to become citizens. And yet this is what happened on July 28, 1868, when the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was adopted. It was on that day that Secretary of State William Seward issued an announcement in which he certified the permission to make 14th Amendment by the states. Ever since that time, the descendants of slaves have had to remove the label of a slave, even after the physical torture was over. The 15th amendment ratified in 1870 kept states from not letting male citizens vote based on race, color, or anything else. Even though this …show more content…

They began after the Reconstruction period, these laws continued with force until 1965. It was created to be separate but equal treatment, but kept black citizens to inferior treatment and facilities. Education and public facilities such as hotels and restaurants were segregated under jim crow laws. The United States military was also segregated until pres. Truman after the World War II. the term “jim crow” originally came from a song which mentions a black character, and it was the name of a popular dance in the 1820s. In the beginning of the 1880s the term “Jim Crow” was used as a reference to practices or laws used to separate black people from white people. Jim Crow laws in several states required segregation of races in common areas like restaurants and …show more content…

No Klan group was more ruthless than the secretive White Knights of Mississippi. The White Knights had only 6,000 or 7,000 members at its peak, but still earned the reputation as the most bloodthirsty faction of the Klan since reconstruction. The White Knights committed many crimes during the 1960s, but the most shocking were the murders of one black and two white civil rights workers in Philadelphia, Mississippi, on June 21, 1964. 21-year-old black Mississippian, James Chaney, and two white New Yorkers, Andrew Goodman, 20, and Michael Schwerner, 24. There were other senseless killings by the Klan during the 1960s. Among the victims were: Lt. Col. Lemuel Penn, a black educator who was heading home to Washington after summer military duty at ft. Benning, Georgia and was shot; rev. James Reeb, who was beaten during voting rights protests in Selma, Alabama; and Viola Liuzzo, a civil rights worker who was shot in 1965 while driving between Montgomery and

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