Jim Crow: Shorthand For Separation

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Jim Crow. “What is Jim Crow?” You ask. “Is that a person?” No, actually, it is not. The term Jim Crow was a “colloquialism whites and blacks routinely used for the complex system of laws and customs separating races in the south” (Edmonds, Jim Crow: Shorthand for Separation). In other words, it was a set of laws and customs that people used that separated white people from the colored. The Jim Crow laws and practices deprived American citizens of the rights to vote, buses, and “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” First, though, a little background on Jim Crow is in order. The term Jim Crow dates back to the eighteenth century, although there is no evidence it is referencing an actual person. Instead, it was a “mildly derogatory slang for black Everyman (Crow, as in black like a crow)” (Edmonds, Jim Crow: Shorthand for Separation). A segregated rail car, or anything separated from the Caucasian race might be called ‘Jim Crow’ because of a “popular American minstrel song of the 1820s made sport of a stereotypic Jim Crows” (Edmonds, Jim Crow: Shorthand for Separation). Finally, “As segregation laws were put into place-first in Tennessee, then throughout the South- after Reconstruction, …show more content…

Starting in the 1890s, southern states ratified literacy tests, poll taxes, elaborate registration systems, and in time, whites-only Democratic Party primaries to preclude black voters (White Only: Jim Crow in America, Separate is not Equal). These worked because some colored people did not have the opportunity to get an education, and/or didn’t have the money to pay the poll taxes. This took away the colored peoples civil rights because it took away their opportunity to have a say in what goes on in their country. It takes away their right to state their opinion on how the country is

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