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What Was Jim Crow?

What Was Jim Crow?. “Jim Crow” is the name given to anti-Black laws in place in America in effect between 1877-1960’s. These went beyond just rules. They were a way of life in much of the South. Here are some examples. Jim Crow Laws.

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What Was Jim Crow?

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  1. What Was Jim Crow? “Jim Crow” is the name given to anti-Black laws in place in America in effect between 1877-1960’s. These went beyond just rules. They were a way of life in much of the South. Here are some examples.

  2. Jim Crow Laws • A Black male could not shake hands with a White male because it implied being equal. • Blacks and Whites were not supposed to eat together. If they did, Whites were to be served first and some sort of partition was placed between them. • Blacks were not allowed to show public affection for each other. No kissing, hugging, or hand holding even if they were married, because it may offend Whites. • Titles of respect such as Mr. Mrs. Ms. Sir, or Ma’am were not to be used for Blacks. Blacks were called by their first names. A Black person could not use a White person’s first name. • Black persons must sit in the back of a car or bus.

  3. Jim Crow Laws Blacks must: • Never assert or imply that a White person is lying • Never claim or demonstrate superior knowledge or intelligence • Never curse a White person • Never laugh at a White person • Never comment on the appearance of a White female. Avoid physical contact.

  4. Jim Crow Laws • “ No colored barber shall serve as barber to White women.” • There must be separate waiting rooms for Whites and Blacks in public businesses. • Schools for White and Negro children must be separate. • There must be a separate area for colored people wishing to use a public library. • In Alabama it was illegal for Blacks and Whites to play checkers together. • Hospitals and prisons must also have separate facilities for Blacks and Whites. • Blacks cannot drink from fountains designated for Whites.

  5. Jim Crow Laws • Anyone who violated these laws risked their homes, jobs, and even their lives. Between the year 1882 and 1968, there were 4,730 known lynchings (public murder carried out by mobs.) Most lynching victims were hung or shot, but others were burned at the stake or beaten to death. There was no punishment for harming a Black person who was accused of violating a Jim Crow law. • Excerpts from Dr. David Pilgrim, Sept. 2000.

  6. Beale Street, Memphis, Tennessee. 1939.

  7. Sign above movie theater, Waco, Texas. 1939.

  8. Water cooler in the street car terminal, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. 1939.

  9. Restaurant, Lancaster, Ohio. 1938.

  10. The Rex theater for colored people, Leland, Mississippi. June 1937.

  11. Movie theater’s "Colored" entrance, Belzoni, Mississippi. 1939.

  12. Drinking fountain on the courthouse lawn, Halifax, North Carolina. 1938.

  13. Cafe, Durham, North Carolina. 1939.

  14. A highway sign advertising tourist cabins for Blacks, South Carolina. 1939.

  15. A rest stop for bus passengers on the way from Louisville, Kentucky to Nashville, Tennessee, with separate entrance for Blacks. 1943.

  16. Greyhound bus terminal, Memphis, Tennessee. 1943.

  17. At the bus station, Durham, North Carolina, 1940.

  18. A sign at bus station, Rome, Georgia. 1943.

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