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Ch. 11 Segregation

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Ch. 11 Segregation & Discrimination (1870s 1960s) Booker T. Washington Black educator. Believed African-Americans should learn useful labor skills & prove ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ch. 11 Segregation


1
Ch. 11 Segregation Discrimination (1870s
1960s)
  • Booker T. Washington
  • Black educator. Believed African-Americans
    should learn useful labor skills prove economic
    value to society.
  • Founded Tuskegee University in Alabama.
  • Favored gradual approach to equality. Financial
    security first, civil rights later.

2
  • W.E.B. Dubois
  • First African-American to receive a degree from
    Harvard University.
  • Strongly disagreed w/ Booker T.
  • Wanted blacks to seek education lead their
    communities in demanding immediate equal rights.
  • Founded Niagra Movement later became the NAACP.
    Used courts legislature to fight for
    African-American rights.

3
  • Segregation Discrimination
  • Segregation separating people on the basis of
    race.
  • During Reconstruction, African Americans
    exercised newly won rights.
  • 14th amendment all citizens have equal
    protection under the law 15th amendment right
    to vote for all males regardless of race.
  • After the end of Reconstruction in 1877, Southern
    states began to pass laws to racially
    discriminate and weaken black political power.

4
  • Voting Restrictions
  • All Southern states imposed laws to
    disenfranchise (deny the right to vote) African
    Americans.
  • Literacy Tests
  • Only people who could read were allowed to vote.
    Blacks were often asked more difficult questions
    then whites. Officials could pass or fail
    applicants as they wished.
  • Poll Tax
  • Annual tax that had to be paid before voting.
    Many blacks (and some whites) were too poor to
    pay tax.

5
  • Grandfather Clause
  • A man could vote if he, his father, or
    grandfather had been eligible to vote before
    1867. Date was important because freed slaves
    did not have the right to vote at the time.
    Meant all black males could not vote.
  • Jim Crow Laws
  • Laws passed by southern states to institute
    segregation (separate by race). Blacks and whites
    required to use separate public facilities
    (schools, restrooms, parks, hospitals, ect.)

6
  • Plessy v. Ferguson
  • Supreme court case that tested the legality of
    segregation.
  • In 1896, court ruled that separation of races did
    not violate 14th amendment. Established doctrine
    of separate but equal allowed states to have
    separate facilities of blacks and whites as long
    as they provided equal service.
  • Facilities were rarely equal. Decision allowed
    legal segregation for next 60 years.

7
Ch.13 The Progressive Era (1900 - 1920)
  • Progressive Movement
  • Reaction to problems created during the Gilded
    Age.
  • Goals of Progressives
  • 1) Return control of the government to the people
  • 2) Restore economic opportunities
  • 3) Correct injustices in American life.
  • Progressives reformers often lived in cities
    had a college education.

8
  • The Muckrakers
  • Journalists who sought to expose political
    corruption, poor working conditions, or other
    problems in American society.
  • Ida Tarbell
  • Muckraker who exposed John Rockefellers ruthless
    tactics to build his oil monopoly in The History
    of the Standard Oil Company.

9
  • Lincoln Steffens
  • Muckraker who wrote The Shame of the Cities.
    Exposed corrupt city politicians and unfair
    businesses practices.
  • Upton Sinclair
  • Muckraker who wrote the bestseller, The Jungle.
    Exposed horrible unsanitary conditions of
    meatpacking industry.

10
Reform in Government
  • Reform in Government
  • Progressives wanted to give common people a
    greater voice and rid government of corruption.
  • Initiative
  • Allowed citizens to initiate, or propose, a bill
    by collecting the required number of signatures
    from voters.

11
Reform in Government
  • Referendum
  • Progressives wanted voters to have a direct say
    in the lawmaking process. In a referendum,
    people could vote to approve or reject a proposed
    law.
  • Recall
  • Allowed voters to remove elected officials from
    office before their terms were complete. Voters
    sign a petition for a recall, then a special
    election takes place to vote a politician out of
    office.

12
Reform in Government
  • Direct Election of Senators
  • Until 1913, state legislatures elected senators
    to represent the states in U.S. Congress.
    Progressives complained that special interests
    could buy votes by bribing legislators.
  • 17th amendment (1913) - required the direct
    election of U.S. Senators in all states.

13
Progressive Reform for States
  • La Follettes Wisconsin Idea
  • Progressive Robert La Follette elected governor
    of Wisconsin in 1900.
  • Established direct primaries in state elections,
    an income tax, protected natural resources,
    regulated taxed big business, etc.
  • Wisconsin became a national model of progressive
    reform. Other states soon followed.

14
Social Moral Reform
  • Ban on Child Labor
  • Progressives used photos statistics to show
    plight of working children. Nearly all states
    banned child labor by 1920 and set maximum
    working hours.

15
Social Moral Reform
  • Temperance Movement (Ban on Alcohol)
  • Some Progressive women felt alcohol was root of
    many social problems. Pushed states to pass ban
    on alcohol.
  • 18 amendment (1919) Illegal to manufacture,
    sale, transport alcohol in U.S.

16
Social Moral Reform
  • Womens Suffrage (right to vote)
  • President Woodrow Wilson did not support female
    suffrage.
  • Instead, states were pressured to grant women
    suffrage (pickets, parades, boycotts)
  • Famous suffragettes included Susan B. Anthony
    Elizabeth Cady Stanton.
  • 19th amendment - ratified in 1920 gave all women
    right to vote.

17
Health Environmental Reform
  • Meat Inspection Act (1906)
  • President Theodore Roosevelt read The Jungle.
    Ordered a federal investigation into meat
    industry.
  • Meat Inspection Act set sanitation standards for
    meat industry.
  • Pure Food Drug Act (1906)
  • Roosevelt Congress to passed Pure Food Drug
    Act. Banned harmful additives in foods and false
    advertisements for drugs.
  • Laws led to creation of the Food and Drug
    Administration improved food safety in America.

18
Health Environmental Reform
  • Progressives Promote Conservation
  • Wanted to protect Americas natural resources
    from abuses by industries during the Gilded Age.
  • States President Roosevelt created millions of
    acres of national forests wilderness areas to
    preserve for future generations of Americans
    (Grand Canyon, Yosemite National Park, etc.)

19
Economic Reform
  • Income Tax Amendment
  • President William Taft Progressives wanted to
    even out the disparities of wealth in American
    society force rich to pay fair share.
  • 16th Amendment (1913) federal graduated income
    tax (tax rate rises as income increases).

20
Economic Reform
  • Trust-busting
  • Roosevelt Taft went after large monopolies by
    filing nearly 150 anti-trust lawsuits under the
    Sherman Antitrust Act.
  • Dismantled Standard Oil Company others.
  • Clayton Antitrust Act (1914)
  • President Woodrow Wilson Progressives
    strengthened Sherman Antitrust Act to allow
    government to regulate large companies
    dismantle monopolies.

21
Economic Reform
  • Federal Trade Commission (1914)
  • Wilson Progressives wanted to police actions of
    businesses to preserve fair competition.
  • FTC has power to order businesses to stop harmful
    practices file lawsuits against monopolies.

22
Impact of Progressive Era
  • Progressive Era reforms helped to level the
    playing field between the rich and poor made
    America more fair, honest, efficient.
  • Progressive energy eventually faded due to World
    War I and economic boom of 1920s.
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