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The Gilded Age. I. The New South A. Visions of a New South B. The Economy C. African-Americans D. The Jim Crow South E. The Black Response. Post-Civil War Southern Economy. Textiles. Post-Civil War Southern Economy. Textiles Tobacco.
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The Gilded Age I. The New South A. Visions of a New South B. The Economy C. African-Americans D. The Jim Crow South E. The Black Response
Post-Civil War Southern Economy • Textiles
Post-Civil War Southern Economy • Textiles • Tobacco
Post-Civil War Southern Economy • Textiles • Tobacco • Coal
Post-Civil War Southern Economy • Textiles • Tobacco • Coal • Iron and Steel
Post-Civil War Southern Economy • Textiles • Tobacco • Coal • Iron and Steel • Lumber Industry
Southern Agriculture • Single Cash Crop Economy
Southern Agriculture • Single Cash Crop Economy • Mostly Cotton and Tobacco
Southern Agriculture • Single Cash Crop Economy • Cotton and Tobacco mostly • Sharecropping and Tenant Farming
Southern Agriculture • Single Cash Crop Economy • Cotton and Tobacco mostly • Sharecropping and Tenant Farming • Crop Lien System
After the Civil War, the price of cotton immediately went up to $1.00 per pound • Then began a steady downward spiral • 1875- 11 cents/pound • 1894- less than 5 cents/pound
After the Civil War, the price of cotton immediately went up to $1.00 per pound • Then began a steady downward spiral • 1875- 11 cents/pound • 1894- less than 5 cents/pound • As a result- farmers had to plant more and more cotton to survive
The Jim Crow South • Disenfranchisement (loss of the vote)
The Jim Crow South • Disenfranchisement (loss of the vote) • Grandfather Clause
The Jim Crow South • Disenfranchisement (loss of the vote) 1. Grandfather clause 2. Poll Tax
The Jim Crow South • Disenfranchisement (loss of the vote) 1. Grandfather clause 2. Poll Tax 3. Literacy Tests
The Jim Crow South • Disenfranchisement (loss of the vote) 1. Grandfather clause 2. Poll Tax 3. Literacy Tests • Results La-1896: 130,000 blacks registered La-1904: 1,300 !
The Jim Crow South • Jim Crow Laws: Legalized Segregation in all public and private facilities 1. Transportation 2. Schools 3. Libraries 4. Drinking Fountains 5. Even morgues and funeral parlors!
Plessy v. Ferguson1896 • The Case: Homer Plessy, 1/8th black, refused to ride in a whites-only RR car, and was arrested. Case appealed to Supreme Ct.
Plessy v. Ferguson1896 • The Case: Homer Plessy, 1/8th black, refused to ride in a whites-only RR car, and was arrested. Case appealed to Supreme Ct. • The Ruling: SEPARATE facilities were OK as long as they were EQUAL.
Plessy v. Ferguson1896 • The Case: Homer Plessy, 1/8th black, refused to ride in a whites-only RR car, and was arrested. Case appealed to Supreme Ct. • The Ruling: SEPARATE facilities were OK as long as they were EQUAL. • Results: Legalized Jim Crow Segregation until 1954 (Brown v. Board of Education)
Other Important Black Leaders • T. Thomas Fortune: helped found NAACP • “Pap” Singleton: tried to form black “colonies” in the West • Henry Turner: Organized “Back to Africa” Movement
W.E.B. Dubois • Well Educated--first African-American to receive PhD from Harvard
W.E.B. Dubois • Well Educated--first African-American to receive PhD from Harvard • Wanted total equality immediately
W.E.B. Dubois • Well Educated--first African-American to receive PhD from Harvard • Wanted total equality immediately • Wanted traditional higher education for blacks
W.E.B. Dubois • Well Educated--first African-American to receive PhD from Harvard • Wanted total equality immediately • Wanted traditional higher education for blacks • The Souls of Black Folk (1903)
W.E.B. Dubois • Well Educated--first African-American to receive PhD from Harvard • Wanted total equality immediately • Wanted traditional higher education for blacks • The Souls of Black Folk (1903) • The Niagara Movement--led to NAACP
Booker T. Washington • Born a slave in Alabama
Booker T. Washington • Born a slave in Alabama • Believed in vocational education for blacks
Booker T. Washington • Born a slave in Alabama • Believed in vocational education for blacks • Founded Tuskegee Institute in Alabama
Booker T. Washington • Born a slave in Alabama • Believed in vocational education for blacks • Founded Tuskegee Institute in Alabama • Believed in gradual equality
Booker T. Washington • Born a slave in Alabama • Believed in vocational education for blacks • Founded Tuskegee Institute in Alabama • Believed in gradual equality • Accused of being an accomodationist or Uncle Tom
Booker T. Washington • Born a slave in Alabama • Believed in vocational education for blacks • Founded Tuskegee Institute in Alabama • Believed in gradual equality • Accused of being an accommodationist or Uncle Tom • Received much white support