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The KKK in Oklahoma. Jim Crow and Discrimination Ku Klux Klan is Revived. Jim Crow in Oklahoma.
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The KKK in Oklahoma Jim Crow and Discrimination Ku Klux Klan is Revived
Jim Crow in Oklahoma • Oklahoma was no different from other southern states—the laws in the constitution tried to limit the economic and physical freedoms of formerly enslaved peoples by adopting Black Codes and welcoming Jim Crow
Poll Taxes • Poll Taxes were legal ways to collect money from potential voters • Many could not afford to cast their ballots
Jim Crow in Oklahoma • Oklahoma supported separating the races—following the pattern of states bordering the Confederacy City Hall in Oklahoma City 1958
Separate Housing and Schools • There were separate housing areas for the races • Blacks could not own or rent property in certain areas • Statute required a separate district to be established for colored children wherever there are at least eight black children, 1897
After World War I • The Ku Klux Klan had revived following the war and carried out a war against blacks—as well as Catholics, Jews, and immigrants
KKK Had a Strong Following in OK • Oklahoma was no different • Many well to do members of society and the government were members of the Klan • Encouraged white supremacy and in their positions of power could enforce the Jim Crow laws • The masks and cloaks became symbols of terror • Thousands of African Americans were killed and terrorized for decades into the 20th century around the country
Walton Declares Martial Law • The Klan’s bloody outrages around Oklahoma caused the governor to declare martial law (law enforcement by the military)
Lynchings • The lynching of Laura Nelson and her son was watched by dozens of onlookers in May 1911 in Okemah, OK • Men were lynched all over the south and many feared for their lives over the tiniest indiscretions
Strange Fruit, Billie Holiday • Southern trees bear a strange fruit, • Blood on the leaves and blood at the root, • Black bodies swinging in the southern breeze, • Strange fruit hanging from the poplar trees. • Pastoral scene of the gallant south, • The bulging eyes and the twisted mouth, • Scent of magnolias, sweet and fresh, • Then the sudden smell of burning flesh. • Here is fruit for the crows to pluck, • For the rain to gather, for the wind to suck, • For the sun to rot, for the trees to drop, • Here is a strange and bitter crop.