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Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

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Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3. Learning Targets. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

Reconstruction toCivil Rights

Day 3

Page 2: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

Learning Targets• I can evaluate the impact of the Bourbon

Triumvirate, Henry Grady, International Cotton Exposition, Tom Watson and the Populists, Rebecca Latimer Felton, the 1906 Atlanta Riot, the Leo Frank Case, and the county unit system on Georgia during this period.

Page 3: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

• I can analyze the denial of rights to African-Americans through

Jim Crow law, Plessy vs. Ferguson, disenfranchisement, and racial violence.• I can explain the roles of Booker T.

Washington, W. E. B. DuBois, John and Lugenia Burns Hope, and Alonzo Herndon.

Learning Targets Continued...

Page 4: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

Civil Rights• The rights that a person has simply because

he or she is a citizen.• For example: freedom of speech, freedom of religion and

press, the right to privacy, protection by due process of law, a trial by a jury of one’s peers (equals), property ownership, voting (if qualified), access to jobs, and ability to travel wherever one wishes inside the country.

Page 5: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

• During the late 1800s and early 1900s, the concept of white supremacy was popular not only in the South, but also in other areas of the western world.

• During Reconstruction and the New South era, most whites and many African Americans accepted racial segregation as a natural way of life.

Page 6: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

Separate but Equal

Jim Crow laws were passed to establish “separate but equal” facilities for whites and blacks.

Separate Facilities

Restrooms

Water Fountains

Railroad Cars

Waiting RoomsLodging

Restaurants

Schools

Page 7: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

Jim Crow Laws• In 1889, the Georgia General Assembly segregated a

number of public facilities including:Theatres

Prison campsWater fountains

Restrooms

**Rarely were they equal to those set aside for whites.

Page 8: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

African Americans Protested...• Protested the Jim Crow Laws in public meetings

throughout the nation.• Henry McNeal Turner called the new civil rights

laws and the segregation that followed “barbarous!”

Page 9: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

Plessy v. Ferguson• U.S. Supreme Court decision that made segregation the law of

the land.• In 1892, Homer Plessy bought a train ticket from New Orleans

to Covington, Louisiana. Because he was 7/8 white and 1/8 black, he took a seat in the “whites only” car. When he refused to move, he was arrested under the “Jim Crow Laws” which required separate-but-equal accommodations for whites and blacks on railroad cars.

• U.S. Supreme Court upheld the law and gave states the right to control social discrimination and to promote segregation of the races.

Page 10: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3
Page 11: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

• One of the outstanding civil rights leaders of the period.

• Forceful speaker, a skilled politician, and an advisor to presidents.

• President of Tuskegee Institute of Alabama

• Believed that economic independence was the only road to social and political equality.

Booker T. Washington

Page 12: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

Atlanta Compromise Speech• Washington spoke at the

opening of the Cotton States and International Exposition in Atlanta.

• Racially mixed crowd • What he said that day shaped

race relations and strongly influenced black leadership for the next 20 years.

• He proposed that blacks and whites should agree to benefit from each other.

Page 13: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

W. E. B. Dubois• Atlanta University Professor• Did not agree with

Washington• At first he thought truth and

knowledge would help different races understand and accept each other.

• Wanted social and political integration and higher education for 10% (Talented Tenth) of African Americans.

Page 14: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

• 2,500 reported lynchings (illegal hangings, usually by mobs) or burnings at the stake of African Americans

Racial Unrest

Page 15: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

“a scar upon my soul.”

• Decided that knowledge and truth alone were not enough.

• There must be action if African Americans and whites were to understand and accept each other.

described each lynching

as “a scar upon my

soul.”

Page 16: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

John Hope• Born in Augusta, Georgia• White father and black

mother• Childhood – treated as the

son of a plantation owner• Father died when he was 8

and didn’t have money or social acceptance.

• 1ST Black President of Atlanta University and Morehouse University

Page 17: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

John Hope Disagreed with Booker T. Washington...

“If we are not striving for equality, in

heaven’s name, for what are we living?... Now catch your breath, for I

am going to use an adjective. I am going to say we demand social

equality.”

Page 18: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

Lugenia Hope• Wife of John Hope• “mover and shaker”• Well-known civic leader• Organized Neighborhood Union +Offered vocational classes for children, a health center, and clubs for boys and girls. +Provided financial aid for needy families and pressured city leaders to improve roads,

lighting, and sanitation in African American neighborhoods in Atlanta.

Page 19: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

Population• By 1900, almost 12% of the African Americans in the nation

lived in Georgia.• 47% of Georgia’s population were African Americans.

1900 19200

200,000

400,000

600,000

800,000

1,000,000

1,200,000

1,400,000

1,600,000

1,800,000

WhiteBlack

Page 20: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

DisfranchisementTaking away the right to vote

15th Amendment had guaranteed blacks the right to vote.

So, state legislators could not disfranchise blacks outright... So they passed laws which applied to everyone but made it more difficult for blacks.

Page 21: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

A Loss of Voting Rights• African American citizens found themselves

pushed aside and without political power.• African American Leaders began to speak out, but

laws continued to be passed with the sole purpose of keeping African Americans from voting.

Page 22: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

• Stated that only those men whose fathers or grandfathers had been eligible to vote in 1867 were eligible to vote.

• Because few African Americans Were able to vote in 1867, this clause kept most of Georgia’s African Americans from voting.

Grandfather Clause

Page 23: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

• Even those who could pass the standards of the grandfather clause faced problems in the voting booth.

• Additional qualifications:+ own property+ pay a poll tax (tax to vote)+ pass literacy tests

Additional Qualifications

Page 24: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

• Not Standard• Questions could

contain almost anything the voting clerk thought would stump the potential voter.

Literacy Tests

Page 25: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

• To draw up an election district in such a way that it benefits a certain group.

• Another tactic to prevent African Americans from voting.

• Districts were drawn up to benefit racial groups, political parties, and special interest groups.

• In Georgia and other southern states, voting districts were drawn specifically to weaken African American voting power.

Gerrymander

Page 26: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

Race Riots in Atlanta

Page 27: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

• On the afternoon of Saturday, September 22, local newspaper headlines carried false reports of black assaults.

• By 9 a.m., a crowd of over 5,000 whites and African Americans had gathered.

• Some accounts reported that thousands of whites brought guns and began to roam through the downtown area.

• Fears grew, and the attacks became real.• Riot lasted for 2 days.• At least 18 African Americans & 3 Whites were killed and

hundreds injured.

Page 28: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

African Americans OrganizeTHE NAACP – National Association for the Advancement of Colored People

--Work for the rights of African Americans The National Urban League

--Interracial group which worked to solve social problems facing African Americans who lived in the cities.

Page 29: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

Trial of Leo Frank• 29 years old• Jewish• From Brooklyn and had moved to

Atlanta to work as superintendent of the National Pencil Company factory.

• Charged with the murder of Mary Phagan (14 year old employee)

• With little evidence, Frank was convicted and sentenced to death.

• Mainly because of the testimony of Jim Conley (factory’s African American janitor).

Page 30: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

Trial of Leo Frank• Frank’s lawyer appealed the

case to the state supreme court.

• Georgia’s Governor John Slaton was under pressure to pardon Frank.

• The day before his term ended, he changed his sentence from death to life imprisonment.

Page 31: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

• Two months later, 25 armed men walked into the state penitentiary in Milledgeville and took Frank from his prison cell.

• They drove to Marietta (the home of Mary Phagan) and hanged Frank from a tree.

Trial of Leo Frank

Page 32: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

Klan Reborn• In July 1915, amid the anti-Jewish

feelings and continuing racial unrest of the Leo Frank case, the Ku Klux Klan received a charter from the Fulton County Superior Court.• The Knights of Mary Phagan gathered on

top of Stone Mountain and lit torches as they circled a burning cross.

Page 33: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3
Page 34: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

The County Unit System• 1917: Neil Primary Act created

“county unit system” • Plan designed to give small

counties more power in state government

• Smaller counties had more county unit “votes” even though they had fewer voters

• People could be elected to office without getting a majority of votes

• Declared unconstitutional in 1962

Page 35: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

8 Most Populous Counties (1920)Fulton County 232,606

Chatham County 100,032

Bibb County 71,304

Richmond County 63,692

Muscogee County 44,195

Dekalb County 44,051

Floyd County 39,841

Laurens County 39,605

Page 36: Reconstruction to Civil Rights Day 3

Alonzo Herndon• Former Slave from Social Circle• Barber and Entrepreneur• Founder and president of Atlanta

Life Insurance Company.• Worked with Booker T.

Washington and W. E. B. DuBois• At the time of his death in 1927,

he was also Atlanta’s wealthiest black citizen, owning more property than any other African American.