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Jim Crow Laws and Racial Segregation in America | The Civil Rights Movement

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    When the president issued the
    Emancipation Proclamation,
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    it was not really something
    that had effect in Georgia
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    because it was more aspirational,
    and it was more strategic.
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    President Lincoln was trying to increase
    the number of freed slaves
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    in parts of the South who could
    fight against the Confederacy.
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    But the Emancipation Proclamation
    did very little in terms of freeing slaves
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    at the time it was issued in 1863.
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    And finally in April of 1865,
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    when General Lee surrendered
    to General Grant in Virginia,
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    we began to see in Georgia a real
    movement towards the freeing of slaves.
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    But it was a slow process.
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    Emancipation came almost
    place by place slowly
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    because there were, in many parts
    of Georgia, not enough federal troops
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    to enforce the end of slavery,
    to enforce the Emancipation.
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    So it became a very slow process.
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    By 1868 in Georgia,
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    there were enough federal troops
    to enforce the US Constitution.
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    And there was the beginning, the passage
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    of federal amendments
    to the US Constitution.
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    There was what we call today a
    Reconstruction Constitution
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    adopted in Georgia in 1868.
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    And that recognized
    the equality of people.
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    It recognized the right of people to work
    and be paid for their work.
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    And at that point, there began to be
    some African Americans
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    who were actually elected to office
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    because they were then
    able to have the vote.
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    And there was great
    white resistance to this.
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    The whole society in Georgia was built
    on the notion that white people
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    were superior and black people
    were inferior.
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    And between 1876 and 1896,
    there was a back and forth.
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    It was a 20-year period in which
    this whole notion
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    of the equality of every citizen
    was in play every day.
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    Whether it was someone trying to vote,
    someone trying to go to school,
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    someone trying to get a job
    that paid a decent wage,
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    someone trying to get a house
    that they could own themselves.
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    Every part of society,
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    there was an uncertainty about just
    how much equality under the law
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    the state would permit.
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    And white folks generally
    wanted no equality for African Americans.
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    And black folks obviously wanted
    their full citizenship,
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    the rights that they were entitled to
    under the new Reconstruction Amendments.
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    And generally that fight went on,
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    and there was an uncertainty
    about what it actually meant,
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    until a case went before
    the US Supreme Court.
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    And that case we now remember
    as Plessy vs. Ferguson.
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    Plessy vs. Ferguson
    was a Supreme Court case in 1896
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    involving an African-American man
    named Homer Plessy.
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    It took place in Louisiana.
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    And Homer Plessy
    sat in a white-only railroad car.
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    In Louisiana, this railroad car company,
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    they had separate cars
    for whites and blacks.
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    And so he sat in the white-only
    railroad car, refused to leave
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    the case ends up going
    through the lower court.
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    It gets to the US Supreme Court.
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    And the US Supreme Court decided
    that it did not violate
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    the Equal Protection Clause
    of the Fourteenth Amendment.
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    So what they decided
    is separate-but-equal doctrine came to be.
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    That as long as you have equal facilities,
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    and they were anything
    but equal in the South,
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    as long as you had equal facilities,
    it was okay to separate the races.
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    Basically, what it allowed
    the southern states to do
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    were some things they were already doing
    with their Jim Crow laws.
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    They make African Americans
    to be second-class citizens.
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    Jim Crow separated folks on streetcars.
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    They separated folks in bathrooms.
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    Black folks would not be allowed
    to use a spigot
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    where water was flowing
    just to get a drink,
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    even if it was used by white folks
    in any way.
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    They just simply wanted to separate
    black people from all of white folks.
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    And then assure that in Jim Crow laws
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    that they were unable to influence society
    so that they could change any of this.
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    Some Jim Crow laws were passed
    during this time
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    to disenfranchise African Americans.
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    Disenfranchise means to deny
    African Americans the right to vote,
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    to deny a certain group of people.
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    And we associate it with our society to
    deny African Americans right to vote.
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    There were several different ways
    to disenfranchise.
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    One of the laws was the poll tax.
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    Well, these former slaves just coming out
    of slavery did not have a lot of money.
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    They could not afford the fee
    to pay in all these different elections.
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    Another was the white primary.
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    In the white primaries, you had to
    be a white person to vote in it.
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    So African Americans were not even
    allowed to vote in the primary elections
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    to even pick the candidate
    that they wanted.
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    And then you had literacy tests,
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    which again it was illegal as slaves
    to learn how to read and write
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    to teach a slave to read and write.
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    So the majority of African Americans
    could not pass these literacy tests
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    because they could not
    read and write legibly.
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    What Jim Crow era did was
    establish a way with the sanction
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    of the Supreme Court
    in Plessy vs. Ferguson,
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    in which to indirectly
    infringe upon those rights,
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    with the blessings of the rest of the
    country and the US Supreme Court...
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    until Brown vs. the Board.
Title:
Jim Crow Laws and Racial Segregation in America | The Civil Rights Movement
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Amplifying Voices
Project:
Black History
Duration:
06:29

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