null
US
Iniciar Sesión
Regístrate Gratis
Registro
Hemos detectado que no tienes habilitado Javascript en tu navegador. La naturaleza dinámica de nuestro sitio requiere que Javascript esté habilitado para un funcionamiento adecuado. Por favor lee nuestros
términos y condiciones
para más información.
Siguiente
Copiar y Editar
¡Debes iniciar sesión para completar esta acción!
Regístrate gratis
1856036
Position of Black Americans
Descripción
Edexcel iGCSE history
Sin etiquetas
black americans
gcse history
1920s usa
history
the usa, 1917-1929 (sources)
a-level
Mapa Mental por
Niamh MacElvogue
, actualizado hace más de 1 año
Más
Menos
Creado por
Niamh MacElvogue
hace casi 10 años
31
3
0
Resumen del Recurso
Position of Black Americans
Jim Crow laws
Laws after end of slavery (1860)
Controlled black people's freedoms as the 41 state governments feared the growing power of black people
Segregated blacks from whites in schools, parks, hospitals, swimming pools, libraries and other public places
After WWI - extended to taxis and boxing matches
Couldn't vote
denied a reasonable education
Unfair treatment
1919 - at least 70 blacks lynched in the Southern states
Police tended to turn a blind eye
360,000 black soldiers served in WWI but returned to racism
Moved north due to racism, bad living conditions, chronic poverty, post 1910
Still unfair in North:
poorly paid jobs
ghettos
racial intolerance
1919 - Polish/Irish immigrants attacked blacks in Chicago who tried to use public facilities
inferior education, healthcare and housing compared to whites
First to be laid off in bad times
Du Bois
PhD at Harvard but unable to get a job at a major university
Aware of the divide despite fairly happy childhood
Urged African-Americans to fight back against segregation
Co-founded Niagara movement
African-American protest group of professionals and scholars
Among founders of NAACP
Protest focussed on securing anti-lynching legislation
Active in showing hardships faced by African-Americans to the UN
Considered himself a socialist
Marcus Garvey
thought African-Americans should be proud of their heritage
Early life - launched several businesses to promote a separate black nation
Set up the Universal Negro Improvement Association to establish strong connections with Africa
Other black rights campaigners didn't support Garvey's idea of a separate Black culture
Ended up being deported
idea passed on to 'Black is beautiful' of the 1960s
The KKK
Aimed to terrorise black people newly freed from slavery
Revived in 1915 after film showed in favourable light
WASPs fighting for white supremacy
Against all foreigners and non-Protestants
Reasons they were supported
Limited employment opportunities supposedly due to immigrants
Particularly war veterans returning from WWI
Fear of black migrants to cities - 1920=100,000 1925=5,000,000
They were anti-communist so fear from Red scare
Mostrar resumen completo
Ocultar resumen completo
¿Quieres crear tus propios
Mapas Mentales
gratis
con GoConqr?
Más información
.
Similar
History- Medicine through time key figures
gemma.bell
History- Religion and medicine
gemma.bell
Britain and World War 2
Ligia Herbst
Truman Doctrine, Marshall Plan, Cominform and Comecon
Alina A
Germany 1918-39
Cam Burke
Weimar Revision
Tom Mitchell
Hitler and the Nazi Party (1919-23)
Adam Collinge
History of Medicine: Ancient Ideas
James McConnell
GCSE History – Social Impact of the Nazi State in 1945
Ben C
Conferences of the Cold War
Alina A
Bay of Pigs Invasion : April 1961
Alina A
Explorar la Librería