Learning White-American History

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Learning White-American History According to Bell (2012) “compared to the majority of other racial and ethnic groups we have summarized, anyone in the United States in high school and college has taken an American History class.” In other words, the history of U. S. Whites in an American history course. After taking this course, being African- American in American means the country was not made for me. In America, property means prosperity, which is why the U. S. Constitution so openly protects a person property. One of the most degrading thing a person can do is deny them the fruits of their labor, which is what America did by law until 1964. Africans accompanied European explorers to the New World in the fifteenth century. However, most accounts date the beginning of black history in the United States to 1619 when the Dutch trading ships brought twenty Africans to Jamestown. Many more ships filled with African laborers followed. The first blacks in the American Colonies were brought in as indentured servants or slaves. Indentured servants had a contract to work without wages for a master for …show more content…

The Civil Rights Act of 1964, which ended separation in public places and banned employment discrimination by race, color, religion, sex or national origin, is considered one of the highest lawmaking accomplishments of the civil rights movement. For example, “President John F. Kennedy instructed it survived with strong opposition from southern members of Congress and was then afterward signed into law by Kennedy’s replacement, Lyndon B. Johnson.” (History, 2009) In following years, Congress extended the civil right movement and also passed additional laws aimed at bringing equality to Blacks, such as the Voting Rights Act of

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