Jim Crow Laws Essay

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    Jim Crow Laws in the States Chonte’ Thomas American Military University, HIST222 Professor Angela Gunshore March 22, 2015   “Jim Crow” in reference to the History of African Americans can be simply described as a derisive slang term for a black man. (Constitutional Rights Foundation, 2015) It is often used to describe the segregation laws, rules, and customs. Each state had a set of Jim Crow Laws forbidding blacks of certain acts. These laws existed from 1877 until the mid-1960s. Jim Crow

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    The Jim Crow laws were a series of terrible racial discrimination acts that lead to the united states being even more segregated. “Jim Crow law, in U.S. history, any of the laws that enforced racial segregation in the South between the end of Reconstruction in 1877 and the beginning of the civil rights movement in the 1950s.” Urofsky, Melvin I. "Jim Crow Law." Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc., 21 Apr. 2015. Web. 30 Apr. 2017. These laws would affect African Americans by creating

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    Jim Crow Laws Era

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    The era of Jim Crow Laws was an era that was unfair to a certain race. Despite the troubles that many people went though, there was bit of good coming from it. It is crazy to think that any good came from the Jim Crow Laws, but very little. The aftermath of Jim Crow laws change, their were protest and role models such as Martin luther King Jr. Jim Crow laws promoted the progress of civil rights by enacting legislation such as; Affirmative action, Integration of schools and The Civil Rights Act.

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    Effects Of Jim Crow Laws

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    segregation, the Jim Crow Laws ----segregation laws, rules and customs --- in every aspects of daily life.(Jim Crow Laws) The origin name “Jim Crow” came from a white performer named Thomas Rice, he colored his face black, appearing on stage as a black person singing the song that includes the phrase “Jim Crow” in 1828. As he performed more, the name “Jim Crow” was widely spread to describe blacks, later on was being used to describe laws and customs which oppressed blacks. (Who was Jim Crow).

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    Jim Crow Laws Paper

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    About a hundred years after the Civil War, almost all American lived under the Jim Crow laws. The Jim Crow Laws actually legalized segregation. These racially enforced rules dominated almost every aspect of life, not to mention directed the punishments for any infraction. The key reason for the Jim Crow Laws was to keep African Americans as close to their former status as slaves as was possible. The following paper will show you the trials and tribulations of African Americans from the beginning

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    Jim Crow Laws Essay

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    Before Jim Crow laws, African Americans had legal and political rights solely because of support from the federal government. Once this support was pulled, though, which happened in about 1877, these few rights were stripped from them. This was, in part, due to Jim Crow laws. Essentially, Jim Crow laws were laws that enforced segregation. They made it increasingly hard for African Americans to vote, taking away the majority of their political voice. Soon, it was legal for state governments to discriminate

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    Jim Crow Laws is a system of laws splitting up the whites and the blacks. When the Jim Crow Laws were legal, they would make the African Americans and whites have entirely different water fountains, parks, waiting rooms, schools, etc. In the white schools, they had trained teachers and the right expensive school supplies all the time. On the other hand, the black schools had unqualified teachers and never had the good school supplies that needed to have to study or do there work. The laws was for

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    Interracial Jim Crow Laws

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    The most prevalent laws to appear not just in the South but, most of the United States dealt with marriage, with a total of sixteen states outlawing the act. Interracial marriage was an unforgiving crime, they were considered null and void, and could be punished by a fine and up to ten years in jail. The laws wording varied from state to state, not just outlawing marriage between white and black but also, between whites and almost any nonwhite race. One-eighth of any nonwhite blood could define a

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    The New Jim Crow Laws

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    In the book the New Jim Crow Laws there is racial discrimination on the African American people in the American society. What is racial discrimination? It is refusing somebody based on race. In the United States we have been racial discriminate on the African American people and that is what cause the south and north to go civil wat was because slavery and racism that existed and even still to this day. In the south the black were less and treated unequal to them historically even today were are

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    One of the many sets of laws that kept African Americans on a tight leash was the Jim Crow Laws. These laws consisted of rules that were unfair and extremely irrational to follow. If you were black you were automatically considered second class, and you had no where as much freedom or rights as an average white person. A black male could not shake the hand of a white male because that would suggest social equality, and if a black male shook the hand of a white female he could be accused of rape.

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