Read the provided YAWP readings. Review the videos provided.? https://fod-infobase-com.occc.idm.oclc.org/p_ViewVideo.aspx?xtid=58760&loid=270427 3)
1) Read the provided YAWP readings.
2) Review the videos provided.
https://fod-infobase-com.occc.idm.oclc.org/p_ViewVideo.aspx?xtid=58760&loid=270427
3) Read about the Great Migration on pages 548 – 550 of the US History online textbook.
4) Review the Nadir of Race PowerPoint presentation.
5) Read the Mildred Lewis Rutherford article provided.
1) Create a conversation starter about these learnings.
2) If we study history so that we don't repeat the mistakes of the past, what do we need to learn and know from this time period?
3) Pose 3 questions from your learning to your fellow students to create further discussions.
What is your reaction to the article quoting Rutherford about the conditions of slaves? They “were the happiest set of people on the face of the globe, free from care or thought of food, clothes, home.”
For generations, many were taught erroneously that slavery was “the happiest time of the negroes’ existence. The slave was a member of the family, often a privileged member. He was the playmate, brother, exemplar, friend, and companion of the white man from cradle to grave.”
Did these beliefs and teachings lead to systemic racism and the widespread passage of the Jim Crow Laws as well as contribute to the continued racial tensions of today? Explain.
Over 100 years ago, Ida B. Wells argued that the nation needed a national remedy to cure the disease of the discriminate killing of its black citizens.
How do you see Wells' arguments playing out today?
Name a modern-day Ida B. Wells and explain why you thought of them.
https://fod-infobase-com.occc.idm.oclc.org/p_ViewVideo.aspx?xtid=58760&loid=270428
What else do you want to discuss about this topic?
Nadir of Race Relations 1890 – 1960s
Beginning in about 1890 and continuing until 1968, white Americans established thousands of towns across the United States for whites only. Many towns drove out their black populations, then posted sundown signs. … Other towns passed ordinances barring African Americans after dark or prohibiting them from owning or renting property; still others established such policies by informal means, harassing and even killing those who violated the rule. Some sundown towns similarly kept out Jews, Chinese, Mexicans, Native Americans, or other groups.
1
PROGRESS
1865: Civil War ends
1866: 14th Amendment passed, granting citizenship rights to African-Americans
1869: 15th Amendment passed, granting voting rights to African-American males
1870: 1st black diplomat appointed
12.7% of US population is black
1870: 700,000 black voters
1872: 1st black governor
Pinckney Benton Stewart Pinchback
Pinckney Benton Stewart Pinchback 1st African-American governor of any state. Louisiana – for 15 days It was not until 1990 that another African American, Douglas Wilder of Virginia, served as governor of any U.S. state.
http://www.math.buffalo.edu/~sww/toomer/toomerphoto.html
On February 25, 1870, exactly 143 years ago today, Hiram R. Revels was sworn into the U.S. Senate, making him the first black person to ever sit in Congress.
After the Reconstruction Act of 1867 was passed by a majority-Republican Congress, the South was divided into five military districts and all men, regardless of race were granted voting rights. Revels was elected by the Mississippi legislature, and seven black representatives were later elected for states like Alabama, South Carolina, Florida and Georgia thanks, in large part, to the support of African American voters.
Revels and some 15 other black men served in Congress during Reconstruction, and more than 600 served in state legislatures, while hundreds held local offices.
4
PROGRESS
1875: 1st black senator elected
Rep. Hiram Revels of MS, served 1 year
1877: 1st black graduate from West Point – Henry O. Flipper
1880: 13.1% of US population is black
1877 – 1890: Acreage owned by freedmen tripled
Black literacy rates:
1870: 18.6%
1890: 42.9%
Interracial marriage:
1861: 27 states it is illegal / 11 states it is legal
1890: 25 states it is illegal / 18 states it is legal
https://picryl.com/media/members-of-the-legislature-state-of-mississippi-1874-75-photographed-by-e-von
75 members
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PYRAMID OF HATE
WHAT HAPPENED???
1866: KKK founded
1890: MS PLAN
MS passed literacy test requirements to prevent blacks from voting
SC, LA, NC, AL, VA, GA, OK adopted similar plans
1895: Black voting decreased by 65%
Bill Tillman elected governor of SC
Called his election, “a triumph of white supremacy”
WHAT HAPPENED???
1882-1890: 619 known lynchings of African-Americans
1891-1900: 1,105 known lynchings
1901-1920: 1,248
1921-1930: 248
1931-1964: 387
1882 – 1968: 3,446 known lynchings of African-Americans
1881: Segregation of public transportation began in TN
Followed by: FL, MS, TX, LA, AL, KY, AR, GA, SC, NC, VA, MD, OK
1883-1921: 21 race riots and massacres
1890: 11.9% of US population is black
Wilson quote: A History of the American People (1901), describing the Klan as a brotherhood of politically disenfranchised white men; famously quoted in The Birth of a Nation (1915).
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NAACP Poster, circa 1926
WHAT HAPPENED???
1896: Plessy v. Ferguson, legalizing segregation, was passed
1909: 29 states interracial marriage is illegal / 18 states it is legal
1910: 10.7% of US population is black
Beginnings of white only neighborhoods
1913: Pres. Wilson admin. began gov’t-wide segregation of all public places
“The white men were aroused by a mere instinct of self-preservation – until at last there sprung into existence a great Ku Klux Klan, a veritable empire of the South, to protect the Southern country.” ~Pres. W. Wilson
1920: 9.9% of US population is black
1922: Anti-Lynching Bill failed to pass through Congress
Stone Mountain Monument – Georgia
https://www.theatlantic.com/video/index/547253/confederate-monuments-graven-image/
The carving was conceived by Mrs. C. Helen Plane,[12] a charter member of the United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC). Sam Venable, active in the Ku Klux Klan and owner of the mountain, deeded the north face of the mountain to the UDC in 1916. The UDC was given 12 years to complete a sizable Civil War monument. Gutzon Borglum, also heavily involved with the Klan, was commissioned to do the carving. Borglum abandoned the project in 1925 (and later went on to begin Mount Rushmore). The US Mint issued a 1925 Commemorative silver US half dollar, bearing the words "Stone Mountain", as part of a fundraiser for the monument.[13] American sculptor Augustus Lukeman continued until 1928, when further work stopped for thirty years. In 1941 segregationist Governor Eugene Talmadge formed the Stone Mountain Memorial Association (SMMA) to continue work on the memorial, but the project was delayed once again by the U.S. entry into World War II (1941–45)
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1890 – 1968: Sundown Towns
Anna, IL – stands for “Ain’t No Niggers Allowed”
Hawthorne, CA – had a sign at its city limits until the 1930s that read, “Nigger, Don’t let the sun set on YOU in Hawthorne”
Minden and Gardnerville, NV – sounded a whistle at 6pm to tell all Native Americans to get out of town before sundown.
Alva Apache Barnsdall Bixby Blackwell Blair Boise City Broken Arrow Caddo Carnegie Cherokee
Cleveland
Collinsville Colony
Comanche Commerce Durant Edmond Erick Fox Gore Greer County Haileyville Healdton
Henryetta Hinton
Hooker Jenks
Lawton Lexington Lindsay Madill Marlow Marshall Medford Minerva Morris Norman Okeene Okemah Ottawa County Paden
Picher Purcell Sapulpa Skiatook Stilwell Taft Tioga Walters Welch
Oklahoma Sundown Towns:
In 1922, when college students in Norman, OK., hired a black jazz band to play at a dance one night, a white mob carrying guns and nooses attacked the dance hall. "Negroes are occasionally seen on the streets of Norman in the daytime, but the 'rule' that they leave at night is strictly enforced," the Oklahoma City Black Dispatch, a black newspaper, reported, and noted, "Several other Oklahoma towns have similar customs."
Among those other towns was Marlow, OK. In 1923, a mob killed a Marlow hotel owner and the black man he'd hired as a janitor. The Pittsburgh Courier, a black newspaper, reported: "Marlow's unwritten law, exemplified by prominent public signs bearing the command: 'Negro, don't let the sun go down on you here,' caused the death Monday night of A.W. Berch, prominent hotel owner, and the fatal wounding of Robert Jernigan, the first colored man who stayed here more than a day in years. Marlow, one of the several towns in Oklahoma which has not allowed our people to settle in their vicinity for years, has abided by the custom of permitting no members of the race to remain there after nightfall."
16
Daily Oklahoman
September 11, 1904
18 Jim Crow laws were passed between 1890 and 1957 in Oklahoma:
1908: Miscegenation. Unlawful for a person of African descent to marry any person not of African descent. Penalty: Felony punishable by a fine of up to $500 and imprisonment for 1 to 5 years.
1915: Telephone companies required to maintain separate booths for whites and blacks.
1921: Prohibited marriage between Indians and Negroes.
1921: Misdemeanor for a teacher to teach white and black children in the same school. Penalty: Cancellation of teaching certificate without renewal for one year.
Several Oklahoma towns designated housing areas in which blacks could not own or rent property.
Drumright City Codes, 1950.
Cemeteries were also segregated.
Racial etiquette: informal set of rules
Blacks give up the sidewalk
Don’t look whites (esp. women) in the eyes
Whites are Mister and Missus.
Blacks never are but are addressed as Uncle or Aunt; as in Uncle Ben’s Rice or Aunt Jemima syrup.
The lynching of Laura Nelson and her son, several dozen onlookers. May 25, 1911, Okemah, Oklahoma.
Austin, Laura and their son L.D. Nelson were taken into custody after L.D. Nelson allegedly shot and killed George H. Loney, Okemah's deputy sheriff, when Loney and a posse turned up at the Nelson's home to investigate the theft of a cow belonging to a Mr. Claude Littrell. Laura's husband pleaded guilty to the theft and was sent to the state prison at McAlester in the town of the same name for three years. Some accounts say in an effort to save her son, Laura said she had fired the fatal shot. Both she and L.D. were arrested and placed in jail at Okemah before their position their was compromised at the Old Schoolton Bridge by lynching.
A teen, Lawrence Nelson, thought the officer was going for his weapon and shot the deputy in the leg. Loney was refused water and bled to death, outraging whites. A posse formed to arrest the Nelson family, which was transported to the Okemah jail, according to Klein’s book. A week later, a mob of Okemah citizens transported Laura Nelson, Lawrence and her infant to a North Canadian River bridge west of town.
“The woman was raped by members of the mob before she was hanged,” The Associated Press reported.
Photographer George H. Farnum captured the image of two corpses dangling over the river as several dozen Caucasian onlookers posed on the bridge. After no one claimed the bodies, the two Nelsons were buried at nearby Greenleaf Cemetery, in unmarked graves. The elder Nelson went to prison, and the baby’s fate is unclear, according to conflicting reports.
The Okemah Ledger published the lynching photo, which became a reprinted postcard sold as a novelty item at local stores, Klein wrote.
21
A postcard showing the burned body of Jesse Washington, Waco, Texas, 1916. Washington, a 17-year-old mentally challenged farmhand, confessed to raping and killing a white woman.
He was castrated, mutilated, and burned alive by a mob, including included the mayor & the police chief.
The lynching of Elias Clayton, 19, Elmer Jackson, 19, and Isaac McGhie, 20. June 15, 1920, Duluth, Minnesota.
Alleged to have assaulted a young white girl
An investigation proved that none of the murdered men participated in the assault.
RED SUMMER, 1919
26 race riots in 5 states
76 known lynchings
Will Brown was accused of assaulting Agnes Loebeck.
"Black Beast First Stick-up Couple"
~The Omaha Bee, 1919
Brown ended up in the hands of the crazed mob. He was beaten into unconsciousness. His clothes were torn off by the time he reached the building's doors. Then he was dragged to a nearby lamp pole on the south side of the courthouse at 18th and Harney around 11:00 p.m. The mob roared when they saw Brown, and a rope was placed around his neck. Brown was hoisted in the air, his body spinning. He was riddled with bullets. His body was then brought down, tied behind a car, and towed to the intersection of 17th and Dodge. There the body was burned with fuel taken from nearby red danger lamps and fire truck lanterns. Later, pieces of the rope used to lynch Brown were sold for 10 cents each. Finally, Brown's charred body was dragged through the city's downtown streets.
Although some of the leaders of the lynching were placed on trial, most received suspended sentences, or were convicted of minor offenses such as destruction of public property.
23
The lynching of Thomas Schipp and Abram Smith in Marion, Indiana, 1930.
Charged with robbing and murdering a white factory worker and raping his girlfriend. A large crowd broke into the jail with sledgehammers, beat the two men, and hanged them.
When Abram Smith tried to free himself from the noose as his body was hauled up by the rope, he was lowered and then his arms broken to prevent him from trying to free himself again.
Police officers in the crowd cooperated in the lynching.
Milwaukee, WI
Founded in 1983 by Dr. James Cameron (1914 – 2006), the only known lynching survivor.
Lynching memorial and slavery museum – Montgomery, AL
https://museumandmemorial.eji.org/
Opened April 2018
Tulsa, OK, May 31-June 1, 1921
Believed to be the worst incident of racial violence in
American history
May 30: Dick Rowland, 19, an African American shoe shiner, got onto an elevator operated by Sarah Page, 17.
Page screamed & stated that Rowland grabbed her by the arm. He was arrested that afternoon by city police.
May 31: The Tulsa Tribune reported that Rowland had attempted to rape Page.
June 1: Mob of angry whites looted and burned the Greenwood Avenue business district, known as “Black Tulsa”
June 2: 35 city blocks lay in ruins, 800+ treated for injuries
Official estimate 10 whites and 26 blacks killed. Later reports stated 300 killed.
Rowland was exonerated. No whites were ever sent to prison for the crimes that occurred during the riot.
1997: a team of scientists and historians uncovered evidence that unidentified riot victims had been buried in unmarked graves.
While it is still uncertain as to precisely what happened in the Drexel Building on May 30, 1921, the most common explanation is that Rowland stepped on Page's foot as he entered the elevator, causing her to scream.
27
Tulsa, OK: May 31- June 1, 1921
June 12th
Click on the above link and click through the map’s years.
Mildred Loving died May 5, 2008 at the age of 68. Richard Loving had died about thirty-three years earlier in a car accident. Each June 12, the anniversary of the ruling, Loving Day events around the country mark the advances of mixed-race couples.
35
Ann Coulter
lawyer, conservative social and political commentator, author, and syndicated columnist.
July 22, 2010:
Coulter declared that
"we don't have racism in America anymore."
2008: Obama elected. 2000 people joined the KKK.
36
“I don't want to go on a lynching party against Michelle Obama unless there's evidence, hard facts, that say this is how the woman really feels. If that's how she really feels – that America is a bad country or a flawed nation, whatever – then that's legit. We'll track it down.”
~Bill O’Reilly, Feb. 2008
Rep. Tim Scott from South Carolina, appointed to the U.S. Senate in Dec. 2012, is the South's first Black Republican senator since Reconstruction.
Appointed but not elected
Only 10 African-American U.S. Senators in American History.
Pres. Obama was #5
April, 2016: Austin Peay State University in Clarksville, Tenn.
“An Art Project”
She wanted to do a project “about cycles of life and death and, in particular, how that relates to the arrival of spring,” he said.
She used rainbow colored yarn because it was “bright and spring-like,” Mr. Jones said, and she wove them into nooses, which were covered in crocheted flowers, because she thought it symbolized death.
39
September, 2018 – California barbershop owner hung a Colin Kaepernick doll from noose
November 2018 – 7 nooses found outside Mississippi Capitol
to a U.S. Senate election were found Monday — the day before a runoff between appointed Republican Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith, who is white, and Democrat Mike Espy, who is black
41
PYRAMID OF HATE
,
Segment of an article
Zimmerman, Jonathan. "A Confederate Curriculum How Miss Millie taught the Civil War." November 6, 2017. Accessed December 7, 2017. https://www.laphamsquarterly.org/millie_rutherford.
“Miss Millie” was the popular nickname of Mildred Lewis Rutherford, one of the most important Southern figures that Americans know the least about. Born into a wealthy slave-owning family in 1851, Rutherford became the principal of a female academy in Athens, Georgia. She was an early and active member of the United Daughters of the Confederacy, working her way up to become the organization’s “historian general” in 1911.
From that perch, Rutherford led the effort to purge Southern school textbooks of “Yankee” sentiment. That meant eliminating any books that tried to strike a balanced or neutral stance, “on the order of ‘we thought we were right,’ rather than ‘we were right,’” wrote one Confederate military veteran in 1902. “We did know we were right then, and we do know it now,” he added. “And we have the right, therefore, to insist that our children shall be told the truth about it, and we should be content with nothing less.”
Rutherford sent hundreds of women into classrooms and school offices to make sure their truth remained unqualified into the next generation. They came armed with her pamphlet, A Measuring Rod to Test Textbooks. It provided a handy checklist to help them define and defend Confederate orthodoxy.
“Reject a book that speaks of the Constitution other than [as] a compact between Sovereign States,” Rutherford instructed, “that calls the Confederate soldier a traitor or rebel, and the war a rebellion…that says the South fought to hold her slaves…that speaks of the slaveholder of the South as cruel and unjust to his slaves…that glorifies Abraham Lincoln and vilifies Jefferson Davis.”
To Rutherford, the first point was the most important one. If the Constitution was an agreement between states rather than a national bond of citizens, then each state retained the right to leave the nation when it so chose. So it was the North—and not the South—that had violated America’s founding compact, by using force to prevent secession. “There was a rebellion,” Rutherford told her assembled aides at a UDC convention, “but it was north of Mason and Dixon’s line.”
Nor was the war about slaves, who, according to Rutherford, “were the happiest set of people on the face of the globe, free from care or thought of food, clothes, home.” Why, then, did the North invade the South? Rutherford’s pamphlet blamed it all upon Lincoln, whose imperious and vengeful character led him into a war of conquest. Hardly a suitable model for young children, Lincoln used uncouth language and once even denied the divinity of Christ. By comparison, the Confederacy’s president was a paragon of virtue, she argued. Davis “never stood for coarse jokes, never violated the Constitution, never stood for retaliation. Lincoln,” Rutherford wrote, “stood for all of these.”
But wherever Rutherford and her lieutenants looked, Southern textbooks flouted these Confederate truths. Angry correspondents reported that some history books still praised Lincoln and the Emancipation Proclamation, which Rutherford called unconstitutional. Nor were other school subjects immune from the “Yankee” virus. One observer found that New Orleans schools taught music from a book that included “The Battle Hymn of the Republic,” the iconic fight song of the Union Army. In Texas, an arithmetic textbook asked children to calculate Union general Ulysses S. Grant’s age on the day he captured Vicksburg.
After Confederate veterans petitioned Texas governor Thomas M. Campbell in 1908 to remove the math book from the state’s list of approved texts, its publisher issued a new edition that replaced the offending “Yankee word problem” with a more regionally appropriate one. The revised version asked students to determine the amount of time that elapsed between Texas’ independence from Mexico and its annexation into the United States.
The Texas episode illustrated a common pattern: when Confederate organizations complained, textbook publishers altered their wares. Some book companies issued so-called mint julep editions to satisfy the Southern market, expunging words such as treason and rebellion. But Rutherford and her aides found that many districts continued to use “Yankee” versions, which included the hated language of shared valor and responsibility.
In response, the UDC sponsored essay contests that exposed children to Confederate mythology in case their textbooks failed at the task. State and local chapters offered prizes to the best essays drawing on interviews with ex-slaveholders, who presumably would teach youngsters about the benign nature of the institution. Slavery was “the happiest time of the negroes’ existence,” read a winning entry in 1915 by one Virginia high school student. “The slave was a member of the family, often a privileged member. He was the playmate, brother, exemplar, friend, and companion of the white man from cradle to grave.”
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