The Harlem Migration

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From around the 1850’s 1870’s, the city of Harlem has been one of migration. Alain Locke described it as such, “Harlem has come to mean...another statue of liberty on the landward side of New York”. Locke adds that Harlem “stands for a folk-movement which in human significance can be compared with the pushing back of the western frontier...or the waves of immigration which have swept overseas.” He defines Harlem as a opportune city and a place of hope for the many migrants that traveled there in the early part of its’ history. The Harlem Renaissance is a result of the great migration of African Americans from the South to the industrial cities of the North. Harlem, as once detailed by Locke, “has become the greatest Negro community the world …show more content…

There were several reasons as to why a massive group of African Americans traveled to Northern states. They hoped to escape sharecropping, peonage and tenant farming. In the 1896 case of Plessy versus Ferguson The Supreme Court ruled that separate accommodations for whites and blacks was constitutional. This ruling allowed the passage of discriminatory laws that angered many African Americans because it retracted progress made during the time of Reconstruction. With the enactment of Jim Crow laws towards the end of the 19th century, discrimination and segregation towards African Americans became legal. These irrational newly established Southern laws made living in the North seem like a dream to the once again oppressed African American. The racial climate of the South had also become a huge threat, widespread lynching and violence put many African Americans in danger; and very this danger was another influence in their migration. Harlem became a popular city for these African American men, women and children to migrate to; and as a result, Harlem became the focus of the modern renaissance. African American literature, music, art, dance, social commentary and culture began to flourish in Harlem particularly in the early 20th century. The Harlem Renaissance can be attributed for exalting the distinctive culture of African

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