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African-American history

African American history started with the arrival of Africans to North America in the 16th and 17th centuries. Former Spanish slaves who had been freed by Francis Drake arrived aboard the Golden Hind at New Albion in California in 1579.[1] The European colonization of the Americas, and the resulting Atlantic slave trade, led to a large-scale transportation of enslaved Africans across the Atlantic; of the roughly 10–12 million Africans who were sold by the Barbary slave trade, either to European slavery or to servitude in the Americas, approximately 388,000 landed in North America.[2][3] After arriving in various European colonies in North America, the enslaved Africans were sold to white colonists, primarily to work on cash crop plantations. A group of enslaved Africans arrived in the English Virginia Colony in 1619, marking the beginning of slavery in the colonial history of the United States; by 1776, roughly 20% of the British North American population was of African descent, both free and enslaved.[4][5]

Left-right from top: 1840 depiction of field hands and child, 1857 newspaper ads for runaway slave rewards, Harriet Tubman, aftermath of 1921 Tulsa race massacre, 1963 March on Washington, civil rights leaders MLK Jr. & Malcolm X, young boy touching President Obama's hair, 2020 George Floyd protests

The American Revolutionary War, which saw the Thirteen Colonies become independent and transform into the United States, led to great social upheavals for African Americans; Black soldiers fought on both the British and the American sides, and after the conflict ended the Northern United States gradually abolished slavery.[6][7] However, the American South, which had an economy dependent on plantations operation by slave labor, entrenched the slave system and expanded it during the westward expansion of the United States.[8][9] During this period, numerous enslaved African Americans escaped into free states and Canada via the Underground Railroad.[10] Disputes over slavery between the Northern and Southern states led to the American Civil War, in which 178,000 African Americans served on the Union side. During the war, President Abraham Lincoln issued the Thirteenth Amendment, which abolished slavery in the U.S., except as punishment for a crime.[11]

After the war ended with a Confederate defeat, the Reconstruction era began, in which African Americans living in the South were granted equal rights with their white neighbors. White opposition to these advancements led to most African Americans living in the South to be disfranchised, and a system of racial segregation known as the Jim Crow laws was passed in the Southern states.[12] Beginning in the early 20th century, in response to poor economic conditions, segregation and lynchings, over 6 million primarily rural African Americans migrated out of the South to other regions of the United States in search of opportunity.[13] The nadir of American race relations led to civil rights efforts to overturn discrimination and racism against African Americans.[14] In 1954, these efforts coalesced into a broad unified movement led by civil rights activists such as Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King Jr. This succeeded in persuading the federal government to pass the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which outlawed racial discrimination.[15]

The 2020 United States census reported that 46,936,733 respondents identified as African Americans, forming roughly 14.2% of the American population.[16] Of those, over 2.1 million immigrated to the United States as citizens of modern African states.[17] African Americans have made major contributions to the culture of the United States, including literature, cinema and music.[18]

Enslavement edit

 
African American slaves in Georgia

African origins edit

African Americans are the descendants of Africans who were forced into slavery after they were captured during African wars or raids. They were captured and brought to America as part of the Atlantic slave trade.[19] African Americans are descended from various ethnic groups, mostly from ethnic groups that lived in West and Central Africa, including the Sahel. A smaller number of African Americans are descended from ethnic groups that lived in Eastern and Southeastern Africa. The major ethnic groups that the enslaved Africans belonged to included the Bakongo, Igbo, Mandinka, Wolof, Akan, Fon, Yoruba, and Makua, among many others. Although these different groups varied in customs, religious theology and language, what they had in common was a way of life which was different from that of the Europeans.[20] Originally, a majority of the future slaves came from these villages and societies, however, once they were sent to the Americas and enslaved, these different peoples had European standards and beliefs forced upon them, causing them to do away with tribal differences and forge a new history and culture that was a creolization of their common past, present, and European culture .[21] Slaves who belonged to specific African ethnic groups were more sought after and became more dominant in numbers than slaves who belonged to other African ethnic groups in certain regions of what later became the United States.[22]

Regions of Africa edit

Studies of contemporary documents reveal seven regions from which Africans were sold or taken during the Atlantic slave trade. These regions were:

The largest source of slaves transported across the Atlantic Ocean for the New World was West Africa. Some West Africans were skilled iron workers and were therefore able to make tools that aided in their agricultural labor. While there were many unique tribes with their own customs and religions, by the 10th century many of the tribes had embraced Islam. Those villages in West Africa which were lucky enough to be in good conditions for growth and success, prospered. They also contributed their success to the slave trade.[20]

In all, about 10–12 million Africans were transported to the Western Hemisphere. The vast majority of these people came from that stretch of the West African coast extending from present-day Senegal to Angola; a small percentage came from Madagascar and East Africa. Only 5% (about 500,000) went to the American colonies. The vast majority went to the West Indies and Brazil, where they died quickly. Demographic conditions were highly favorable in the American colonies, with less disease, more food, some medical care, and lighter work loads than prevailed in the sugar fields.[5]

Origins and percentages of African Americans imported to the Thirteen Colonies, New France, and New Spain (1700–1820):[24]

Region Percentage
West Central Africa 26.1%
Bight of Biafra 24.4%
Sierra Leone 15.8%
Senegambia 14.5%
Gold Coast 13.1%
Bight of Benin 4.3%
Mozambique-Madagascar 1.8%
Total 100.0%

The Middle Passage edit

Before the Atlantic slave trade there were already people of African descent in America. A few countries in Africa would buy, sell, and trade other enslaved Africans, who were often prisoners of war, with the Europeans. The people of Mali and Benin are known for partaking in the event of selling their prisoners of war and other unwanted people off as slaves.[20]

Transport edit

In the account of Olaudah Equiano, he described the process of being transported to the colonies and being on the slave ships as a horrific experience. On the ships, the enslaved Africans were separated from their family long before they boarded the ships.[25] Once aboard the ships the captives were then segregated by gender.[25] Under the deck, the enslaved Africans were cramped and did not have enough space to walk around freely. Enslaved males were generally kept in the ship's hold, where they experienced the worst of crowding.[25] The captives stationed on the floor beneath low-lying bunks could barely move and spent much of the voyage pinned to the floorboards, which could, over time, wear the skin on their elbows down to the bone.[25] Due to the lack of basic hygiene, malnourishment, and dehydration diseases spread wildly and death was common.

The women on the ships often endured rape by the crewmen.[20] Women and children were often kept in rooms set apart from the main hold. This gave crewmen easy access to the women which was often regarded as one of the perks of the trade system.[25] Not only did these rooms give the crewmen easy access to women but it gave enslaved women better access to information on the ship's crew, fortifications, and daily routine, but little opportunity to communicate this to the men confined in the ship's hold.[25] As an example, women instigated a 1797 insurrection aboard the slave ship Thomas by stealing weapons and passing them to the men below as well as engaging in hand-to-hand combat with the ship's crew.[25]

In the midst of these terrible conditions, enslaved Africans plotted mutiny. Enslaved males were the most likely candidates to mutiny and only at times they were on deck.[25] While rebellions did not happen often, they were usually unsuccessful. In order for the crew members to keep the enslaved Africans under control and prevent future rebellions, the crews were often twice as large and members would instill fear into the enslaved Africans through brutality and harsh punishments.[25] From the time of being captured in Africa to the arrival to the plantations of the European masters, took an average of six months.[20] Africans were completely cut off from their families, home, and community life.[26] They were forced to adjust to a new way of life.

Colonial era edit

 
"Landing Negroes at Jamestown from Dutch man-of-war, 1619", 1901.
 
"Slaves working in 17th-century Virginia", by an unknown artist, 1670.

Africans assisted the Spanish and the Portuguese during their early exploration of the Americas. In the 16th century some Black explorers settled in the Mississippi valley and in the areas that became South Carolina and New Mexico. The most celebrated Black explorer of the Americas was Estéban, who traveled through the Southwest in the 1530s.[27]

In 1619, the first captive Africans were brought via Dutch slave ship to Point Comfort (today Fort Monroe in Hampton, Virginia), thirty miles downstream from Jamestown, Virginia.[28] They had been kidnapped by Portuguese slave traders.[29] Virginia settlers treated these captives as indentured servants and released them after a number of years. This practice was gradually replaced by the system of chattel slavery used in the Caribbean.[30] When servants were freed, they became competition for resources. Additionally, released servants had to be replaced.[31]

This—combined with the ambiguous nature of the social status of Black people and the difficulty in using any other group of people as forced servants—led to the subjugation of Black people into slavery. Massachusetts was the first colony to legalize slavery in 1641.[32] Other colonies followed suit by passing laws that made slave status heritable and non-Christian imported servants slaves for life.[31]

At first, Africans in the South were outnumbered by white indentured servants who came voluntarily from Europe. They[who?] avoided the plantations. With the vast amount of arable land and a shortage of laborers, plantation owners turned to African slavery. The enslaved had some legal rights—it was a crime to kill an enslaved person, for example, and several whites were hanged for it.[citation needed] Generally, enslaved Africans developed their own family system, religion, and customs in the slave quarters with little interference from owners, who were only interested in work outputs.[citation needed] Before the 1660s, the North American mainland colonies were still fairly small in size and did not have a great demand for labour, so colonists did not import large numbers of enslaved Africans at this point.[citation needed]

Black population in the 1700s edit

By 1700, there were 25,000 enslaved Black people in the North American mainland colonies, forming roughly 10% of the population. Some enslaved Black people had been directly shipped from Africa (most of them were from 1518 to the 1850s), but initially, in the very early stages of the European colonization of North America, occasionally they had been shipped via the West Indies in small cargoes after spending time working on the islands.[33] At the same time, many were born to Africans and their descendants, and thus were native-born on the North American mainland. Their legal status was now clear: enslaved for life, with Black children inheriting the same status.[34]

As European colonists engaged in aggressive expansionism, claiming and clearing more land for large-scale farming and the construction of plantations, the flow of enslaved Africans brought to the continent rapidly increased, beginning in the 1660s.[35] The slave trade from the West Indies proved insufficient to meet demand in the now fast-growing North American slave market. Additionally, most North American buyers of enslaved people no longer wanted to purchase enslaved people who were coming in from the West Indies—by now they were either harder to obtain, too expensive, undesirable, or more often, they had been exhausted in many ways by the brutality of the islands' sugar plantations.[36] From the 1680s onward, the majority of enslaved Africans imported into North America were shipped directly from Africa, and most of them disembarked in ports located in what is now the Southern U.S, particularly in the present-day states of Virginia, South Carolina, Georgia, and Louisiana.

By the turn of the 18th century, enslaved Africans had come to fully supplant indentured servants in proving the labor source for the rapidly expanding plantation system of the Southern Colonies.[37] The population of enslaved African Americans in North American grew rapidly during the 18th and early 19th centuries due to a variety of factors, including a lower prevalence of tropic diseases.[38] Colonial society was divided over the religious and moral implications of slavery, though it remained legal in each of the Thirteen Colonies until the American Revolution. Slavery led to a gradual shift between the American South and North, both before and after independence, as the comparatively more urbanized and industrialized North required fewer slaves than the South.[39]

By the 1750s, the native-born enslaved population of African descent outnumbered that of the African-born enslaved.[citation needed] By the time of the American Revolution, several Northern states were considering the abolition of slavery.[citation needed] Some Southern colonies, such as Virginia, had produced such large and self-sustaining native-born enslaved Black populations that they stopped taking indirect imports of enslaved Africans altogether.[citation needed] However, other colonies such as Georgia and South Carolina still relied on a steady influx of enslaved people to keep up with the ever-growing demand for agricultural labor among the burgeoning plantation economies. These colonies continued to import enslaved Africans until the trade was outlawed in 1808, save for a temporary lull during the Revolutionary War.

South Carolina's Black population remained very high for most of the eighteenth century due to the continued import of enslaved Africans, with Blacks outnumbering whites three-to-one.[citation needed] In contrast, Virginia maintained a white majority despite its significant Black enslaved population.[40] It was said that in the eighteenth century, the colony South Carolina resembled an "extension of West Africa".[citation needed] Legal importation of enslaved Africans halted in 1808 when the newly formed United States outlawed the slave trade on the earliest date allowed by the Constitution. Despite the ban, small to moderate cargoes of enslaved Africans continued to be illegally brought into the U.S., only ending for good in 1859.[41]

Gradually, a free Black population emerged, concentrated in port cities along the Atlantic coast from Charleston to Boston.[citation needed] Enslaved people who lived in the cities and towns had more privileges than enslaved people who did not, but the great majority of enslaved people lived on southern tobacco or rice plantations, usually in groups of 20 or more.[42] Wealthy plantation owners eventually became so reliant on slavery that they devastated their own lower class.[43] In the years to come, the institution of slavery would be so heavily involved in the South's economy that it would divide America.

The most serious slave rebellion was the 1739 Stono Uprising in South Carolina. The colony had about 56,000 enslaved Blacks, outnumbering whites two-to-one. About 150 enslaved people rose up, seizing guns, ammunition, and killing twenty whites before fleeing to Spanish Florida. The local militia soon intercepted and killed most of the slaves involved in the uprising.[44]

At this time[when?], slavery existed in all American colonies. In the North, 2% of people owned enslaved people, most of whom were personal servants. In the south, 25% of the population relied on the labour of enslaved people.[in what fashion? who, plantation owners or small-time farmers?] Southern slavery usually took the form of field hands who lived and worked on plantations.[45] These statistics show the early imbalance that would eventually tip the scale and rid the United States of slavery.[clarification needed][46]

American Revolution and early United States edit

The latter half of the 18th century was a time of significant political upheaval on the North American continent. In the midst of cries for independence from British rule, many pointed out the hypocrisy inherent in colonial slaveholders' demands for freedom. The Declaration of Independence, a document which would become a manifesto for human rights and personal freedom around the world, was written by Thomas Jefferson, a man who owned over 200 enslaved people. Other Southern statesmen were also major slaveholders. The Second Continental Congress considered freeing enslaved people to assist with the war effort, but they also removed language from the Declaration of Independence that included the promotion of slavery amongst the offenses of King George III. A number of free Black people, most notably Prince Hall—founder of Prince Hall Freemasonry—submitted petitions which called for abolition, but these were largely ignored.[47]

This did not deter Black people, free and enslaved, from participating in the Revolution. Crispus Attucks, a free Black tradesman, was the first casualty of the Boston Massacre and of the ensuing American Revolutionary War. 5,000 Black people, including Prince Hall, fought in the Continental Army. Many fought side by side with White soldiers at the battles of Lexington and Concord and at Bunker Hill. However, upon George Washington's ascension to commander of the Continental Army in 1775, the additional recruitment of Black people was forbidden.[citation needed]

Approximately 5000 free African-American men helped the American Colonists in their struggle for freedom. One of these men, Agrippa Hull, fought in the American Revolution for over six years. He and the other African-American soldiers fought in order to improve their white neighbor's views of them and advance their own fight of freedom.[48]

By contrast, the British and Loyalists offered emancipation to any enslaved person owned by a Patriot who was willing to join the Loyalist forces. Lord Dunmore, the Governor of Virginia, recruited 300 African-American men into his Ethiopian regiment within a month of making this proclamation. In South Carolina 25,000 enslaved people, more than one-quarter of the total, escaped to join and fight with the British, or fled for freedom in the uproar of war.[citation needed] Thousands of slaves also escaped in Georgia and Virginia, as well as New England and New York. Well-known African-Americans who fought for the British include Colonel Tye and Boston King.[citation needed]

Thomas Peters was one of the large numbers of African Americans who fought for the British. Peters was born in present-day Nigeria and belonged to the Yoruba tribe, and ended up being captured and sold into slavery in French Louisiana.[49] Sold again, he was enslaved in North Carolina and escaped his master's farm in order to receive Lord Dunmore's promise of freedom. Peters had fought for the British throughout the war. When the war finally ended, he and other African Americans who fought on the losing side were taken to Nova Scotia. Here, they encountered difficulty farming the small plots of lands they were granted. They also did not receive the same privileges and opportunities as the white Loyalists had. Peters sailed to London in order to complain to the government. "He arrived at a momentous time when English abolitionists were pushing a bill through Parliament to charter the Sierra Leone Company and to grant it trading and settlement rights on the West African coast." Peters and the other African Americans on Nova Scotia left for Sierra Leone in 1792. Peters died soon after they arrived, but the other members of his party lived on in their new home where they formed the Sierra Leone Creole ethnic identity.[50][51][52][53][54]

American independence edit

The colonists eventually won the war and the United States was recognized as a sovereign nation. In the provisional treaty, they demanded the return of property, including enslaved people. Nonetheless, the British helped up to 3,000 documented African Americans to leave the country for Nova Scotia, Jamaica and Britain rather than be returned to slavery.[55]

The Constitutional Convention of 1787 sought to define the foundation for the government of the newly formed United States of America. The constitution set forth the ideals of freedom and equality while providing for the continuation of the institution of slavery through the fugitive slave clause and the three-fifths compromise. Additionally, free Black people's rights were also restricted in many places. Most were denied the right to vote and were excluded from public schools. Some Black people sought to fight these contradictions in court. In 1780, Elizabeth Freeman and Quock Walker used language from the new Massachusetts constitution that declared all men were born free and equal in freedom suits to gain release from slavery. A free Black businessman in Boston named Paul Cuffe sought to be excused from paying taxes since he had no voting rights.[56]

In the Northern states, the revolutionary spirit did help African Americans. Beginning in the 1750s, there was widespread sentiment during the American Revolution that slavery was a social evil (for the country as a whole and for the whites) that should eventually be abolished.[citation needed] All the Northern states passed emancipation acts between 1780 and 1804; most of these arranged for gradual emancipation and a special status for freedmen, so there were still a dozen "permanent apprentices" into the 19th century. In 1787 Congress passed the Northwest Ordinance and barred slavery from the large Northwest Territory.[57] In 1790, there were more than 59,000 free Black people in the United States. By 1810, that number had risen to 186,446. Most of these were in the North, but Revolutionary sentiments also motivated Southern slaveholders.

For 20 years after the Revolution, more Southerners also freed enslaved people, sometimes by manumission or in wills to be accomplished after the slaveholder's death. In the Upper South, the percentage of free Black people rose from about 1% before the Revolution to more than 10% by 1810. Quakers and Moravians worked to persuade slaveholders to free families. In Virginia, the number of free Black people increased from 10,000 in 1790 to nearly 30,000 in 1810, but 95% of Black people were still enslaved. In Delaware, three-quarters of all Black people were free by 1810.[58] By 1860, just over 91% of Delaware's Black people were free, and 49.1% of those in Maryland.[59]

Among the successful free men was Benjamin Banneker, a Maryland astronomer, mathematician, almanac author, surveyor, and farmer, who in 1791 assisted in the initial survey of the boundaries of the future District of Columbia.[60] Despite the challenges of living in the new country, most free Black people fared far better than the nearly 800,000 enslaved Blacks. Even so, many considered emigrating to Africa.[56]

Religion edit

By 1800, a small number of slaves had joined Christian churches. Free Black people in the North set up their own networks of churches and in the South the slaves sat in the upper galleries of white churches. Central to the growth of community among Blacks was the Black church, usually the first communal institution to be established. The Black church was both an expression of community and unique African-American spirituality, and a reaction to discrimination. The churches also served as neighborhood centers where free Black people could celebrate their African heritage without intrusion from white detractors. The church also served as the center of education. Since the church was part of the community and wanted to provide education; it educated the freed and enslaved Black people. Seeking autonomy, some Black people like Richard Allen (bishop) founded separate Black denominations.[61]

The Second Great Awakening (1800–1830s) has been called the "central and defining event in the development of Afro-Christianity."[62][63]

Antebellum period edit

 
A plantation in Louisiana.

As the United States grew, the institution of slavery became more entrenched in the southern states, while northern states began to abolish it. Pennsylvania was the first, in 1780 passing an act for gradual abolition.[64]

A number of events continued to shape views on slavery. One of these events was the Haitian Revolution, which was the only slave revolt that led to an independent country. Many slave owners fled to the United States with tales of horror and massacre that alarmed Southern whites.[65]

The invention of the cotton gin in the 1790s allowed the cultivation of short staple cotton, which could be grown in much of the Deep South, where warm weather and proper soil conditions prevailed. The industrial revolution in Europe and New England generated a heavy demand for cotton for cheap clothing, which caused an enormous demand for slave labor to develop new cotton plantations. There was a 70% increase in the number of slaves in the United States in only 20 years. They were overwhelmingly concentrated on plantations in the Deep South, and moved west as old cotton fields lost their productivity and new lands were purchased. Unlike the Northern States who put more focus into manufacturing and commerce, the South was heavily dependent on agriculture.[66] Southern political economists at this time supported the institution by concluding that nothing was inherently contradictory about owning slaves and that a future of slavery existed even if the South were to industrialize.[67] Racial, economic, and political turmoil reached an all-time high regarding slavery up to the events of the Civil War.

In 1807, at the urging of President Thomas Jefferson, Congress abolished the importation of enslaved workers. While American Black people celebrated this as a victory in the fight against slavery, the ban increased the internal trade in enslaved people. Changing agricultural practices in the Upper South from tobacco to mixed farming decreased labor requirements, and enslaved people were sold to traders for the developing Deep South. In addition, the Fugitive Slave Act of 1793 allowed any Black person to be claimed as a runaway unless a White person testified on their behalf. A number of free Black people, especially indentured children, were kidnapped and sold into slavery with little or no hope of rescue. By 1819 there were exactly 11 free and 11 slave states, which increased sectionalism. Fears of an imbalance in Congress led to the 1820 Missouri Compromise that required states to be admitted to the union in pairs, one slave and one free.[68]

In 1850, after winning the Mexican–American War, a problem gripped the nation: what to do about the territories won from Mexico. Henry Clay, the man behind the compromise of 1820, once more rose to the challenge, to craft the compromise of 1850. In this compromise the territories of New Mexico, Arizona, Utah, and Nevada would be organized but the issue of slavery would be decided later. Washington D.C. would abolish the slave trade but not slavery itself. California would be admitted as a free state but the South would receive a new fugitive slave act which required Northerners to return enslaved people who escaped to the North to their owners. The compromise of 1850 would maintain a shaky peace until the election of Lincoln in 1860.[69]

In 1851 the battle between enslaved people and slave owners was met in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. The Christiana Riot demonstrated the growing conflict between states' rights and Congress on the issue of slavery.[70]

Abolitionism edit

Abolitionists in Britain and the United States in the 1840–1860 period developed large, complex campaigns against slavery.

According to Patrick C. Kennicott, the largest and most effective abolitionist speakers were Black people who spoke before the countless local meetings of the National Negro Conventions. They used the traditional arguments against slavery, protesting it on moral, economic, and political grounds. Their role in the antislavery movement not only aided the abolitionist cause but also was a source of pride to the Black community.[71]

In 1852, Harriet Beecher Stowe published a novel that changed how many would view slavery. Uncle Tom's Cabin tells the story of the life of an enslaved person and the brutality that is faced by that life day after day. It would sell over 100,000 copies in its first year. The popularity of Uncle Tom's Cabin would solidify the North in its opposition to slavery, and press forward the abolitionist movement. President Lincoln would later invite Stowe to the White House in honor of this book that changed America.

In 1856 Charles Sumner, a Massachusetts congressmen and antislavery leader, was assaulted and nearly killed on the House floor by Preston Brooks of South Carolina. Sumner had been delivering an abolitionist speech to Congress when Brooks attacked him. Brooks received praise in the South for his actions while Sumner became a political icon in the North. Sumner later returned to the Senate, where he was a leader of the Radical Republicans in ending slavery and legislating equal rights for freed slaves.[72]

Over 1 million enslaved people were moved from the older seaboard slave states, with their declining economies, to the rich cotton states of the southwest; many others were sold and moved locally.[73] Ira Berlin (2000) argues that this Second Middle Passage shredded the planters' paternalist pretenses in the eyes of Black people and prodded enslaved people and free Black people to create a host of oppositional ideologies and institutions that better accounted for the realities of endless deportations, expulsions, and flights that continually remade their world.[74] Benjamin Quarles' work Black Abolitionists provides the most extensive account of the role of Black abolitionists in the American anti-slavery movement.[75]

The Black community edit

[76] Black people generally settled in cities, creating the core of Black community life in the region. They established churches and fraternal orders. Many of these early efforts were weak and they often failed, but they represented the initial steps in the evolution of Black communities.[77]

During the early Antebellum period, the creation of free Black communities began to expand, laying out a foundation for African Americans' future. At first, only a few thousand African Americans had their freedom. As the years went by, the number of Blacks being freed expanded tremendously, building to 233,000 by the 1820s. They sometimes sued to gain their freedom or purchased it. Some slave owners freed their bondspeople and a few state legislatures abolished slavery.[78]

African Americans tried to take the advantage of establishing homes and jobs in the cities. During the early 1800s free Black people took several steps to establish fulfilling work lives in urban areas.[79] The rise of industrialization, which depended on power-driven machinery more than human labor, might have afforded them employment, but many owners of textile mills refused to hire Black workers. These owners considered whites to be more reliable and educable. This resulted in many Black people performing unskilled labor. Black men worked as stevedores, construction worker, and as cellar-, well- and grave-diggers. As for Black women workers, they worked as servants for white families. Some women were also cooks, seamstresses, basket-makers, midwives, teachers, and nurses.[78] Black women worked as washerwomen or domestic servants for the white families. Some cities had independent Black seamstresses, cooks, basketmakers, confectioners, and more.

While the African Americans left the thought of slavery behind, they made a priority to reunite with their family and friends. The cause of the Revolutionary War forced many Black people to migrate to the west afterwards, and the scourge of poverty created much difficulty with housing. African Americans competed with the Irish and Germans in jobs and had to share space with them.[78]

While the majority of free Black people lived in poverty, some were able to establish successful businesses that catered to the Black community. Racial discrimination often meant that Black people were not welcome or would be mistreated in White businesses and other establishments. To counter this, Black people like James Forten developed their own communities with Black-owned businesses. Black doctors, lawyers, and other businessmen were the foundation of the Black middle class.[80]

Many Black people organized to help strengthen the Black community and continue the fight against slavery. One of these organizations was the American Society of Free Persons of Colour, founded in 1830. This organization provided social aid to poor Black people and organized responses to political issues. Further supporting the growth of the Black Community was the Black church, usually the first community institution to be established. Starting in the early 1800s[81] with the African Methodist Episcopal Church, African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and other churches, the Black church grew to be the focal point of the Black community. The Black church was both an expression of community and unique African-American spirituality, and a reaction to European American discrimination. The church also served as neighborhood centers where free Black people could celebrate their African heritage without intrusion by white detractors.[78] The church was the center of the Black communities, but it was also the center of education. Since the church was part of the community and wanted to provide education; they educated the freed and enslaved Black people.[82] At first, Black preachers formed separate congregations within the existing denominations, such as social clubs or literary societies. Because of discrimination at the higher levels of the church hierarchy, some Black people like Richard Allen (bishop) simply founded separate Black denominations.[83]

Free Black people also established Black churches in the South before 1800. After the Great Awakening, many Black people joined the Baptist Church, which allowed for their participation, including roles as elders and preachers. For instance, First Baptist Church and Gillfield Baptist Church of Petersburg, Virginia, both had organized congregations by 1800 and were the first Baptist churches in the city.[84] Petersburg, an industrial city, by 1860 had 3,224 free Black people (36% of Black people, and about 26% of all free persons), the largest population in the South.[85][86] In Virginia, free Black people also created communities in Richmond, Virginia and other towns, where they could work as artisans and create businesses.[87] Others were able to buy land and farm in frontier areas further from white control.

The Black community also established schools for Black children, since they were often banned from entering public schools.[88] Richard Allen organized the first Black Sunday school in America; it was established in Philadelphia during 1795.[89] Then five years later, the priest Absalom Jones established a school for Black youth.[89] Black Americans regarded education as the surest path to economic success, moral improvement and personal happiness. Only the sons and daughters of the Black middle class had the luxury of studying.[78]

Haiti's effect on slavery edit

The revolt of enslaved Haitians against their white slave owners, which began in 1791 and lasted until 1801, was a primary source of fuel for both enslaved people and abolitionists arguing for the freedom of Africans in the U.S. In the 1833 edition of Nile's Weekly Register it is stated that freed Black people in Haiti were better off than their Jamaican counterparts, and the positive effects of American Emancipation are alluded to throughout the paper.[90] These anti-slavery sentiments were popular among both white abolitionists and African-American slaves. Enslaved people rallied around these ideas with rebellions against their masters as well as white bystanders during the Denmark Vesey Conspiracy of 1822 and the Nat Turner Rebellion of 1831. Leaders and plantation owners were also very concerned about the consequences Haiti's revolution would have on early America. Thomas Jefferson, for one, was wary of the "instability of the West Indies", referring to Haiti.[91]

Dred Scott v. Sandford edit

 
Peter[92] aka Gordon, a former enslaved person displays the telltale criss-cross, keloid scars from being bullwhipped, 1863.

Dred Scott was an enslaved man whose owner had taken him to live in the free state of Illinois. After his owner's death, Dred Scott sued in court for his freedom on the basis of his having lived in a free state for a long period. The Black community received an enormous shock with the Supreme Court's "Dred Scott" decision in March 1857.[93] Black people were not American citizens and could never be citizens, the court said in a decision roundly denounced by the Republican Party as well as the abolitionists. Because enslaved people were "property, not people", by this ruling they could not sue in court. The decision was finally reversed by the Civil Rights Act of 1865.[94] In what is sometimes considered mere obiter dictum the Court went on to hold that Congress had no authority to prohibit slavery in federal territories because enslaved people are personal property and the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution protects property owners against deprivation of their property without due process of law. Although the Supreme Court has never explicitly overruled the Dred Scott case, the Court stated in the Slaughter-House Cases that at least one part of it had already been overruled by the Fourteenth Amendment in 1868, which begins by stating, "All persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside."[95]

American Civil War and emancipation edit

The Emancipation Proclamation was an executive order issued by President Abraham Lincoln on January 1, 1863. In a single stroke it changed the legal status, as recognized by the U.S. government, of 3 million enslaved people in designated areas of the Confederacy from "slave" to "free." Its practical effect was that as soon as an enslaved person escaped from slavery, by running away or through advances of federal troops, the enslaved person became legally and actually free. The owners were never compensated. Plantation owners, realizing that emancipation would destroy their economic system, sometimes moved their enslaved people as far as possible out of reach of the Union army. By June 1865, the Union Army controlled all of the Confederacy and liberated all the designated enslaved people.[96]

About 200,000 free Black people and former enslaved people served in the Union Army and Navy, thus providing a basis for a claim to full citizenship.[97] The dislocations of war and Reconstruction had a severe negative impact on the Black population, with much sickness and death.[98]

Reconstruction edit

 
The Emancipation Proclamation.

The Civil Rights Act of 1866 made Black people full U.S. citizens (and this repealed the Dred Scott decision). In 1868, the 14th Amendment granted full U.S. citizenship to African Americans. The 15th Amendment, ratified in 1870, extended the right to vote to Black males. The Freedmen's Bureau was an important institution established to create social and economic order in Southern states.[20]

After the Union victory over the Confederacy, a brief period of Southern Black progress, called Reconstruction, followed. During Reconstruction, the states that had seceded were readmitted into the Union.[99] From 1865 to 1877, under the protection of Union troops, some strides were made toward equal rights for African Americans. Southern Black men began to vote and they were also elected to serve in the United States Congress as well as in local offices such as the office of sheriff. The safety which was provided by the troops did not last long, however, and white Southerners frequently terrorized Black voters. Coalitions of white and Black Republicans passed bills in order to establish the first public school systems in most states of the South, although sufficient funding was hard to find. Black people established their own churches, towns, and businesses. Tens of thousands migrated to Mississippi for the chance to clear and own their own land, as 90 percent of the bottomlands were undeveloped. By the end of the 19th century, two-thirds of the farmers who owned land in the Mississippi Delta bottomlands were Black.[100]

 
African-American children in South Carolina picking cotton, ca. 1870

Hiram Revels became the first African-American senator in the U.S. Congress in 1870. Other African Americans soon came to Congress from South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi. These new politicians supported the Republicans and tried to bring further improvements to the lives of African Americans. Revels and others understood that white people may have felt threatened by the African-American congressmen. Revels stated, "The white race has no better friend than I. I am true to my own race. I wish to see all done that can be done...to assist [Black men]in acquiring property, in becoming intelligent, enlightened citizens...but at the same time, I would not have anything done which would harm the white race,"[101] Blanche K. Bruce was the other African American who became a U.S. senator during this period. African Americans elected to the House of Representatives during this time included Benjamin S. Turner, Josiah T. Walls, Joseph H. Rainey, Robert Brown Elliot, Robert D. De Large, and Jefferson H. Long. Frederick Douglass also served in the different government jobs during Reconstruction, including Minister Resident and Counsel General to Haiti, Recorder of Deeds, and U.S. Marshall.[102] Bruce became a Senator in 1874 and represented the state of Mississippi. He worked with white politicians from his region in order to hopefully help his fellow African Americans and other minority groups such as Chinese immigrants and Native Americans. He even supported efforts to end restrictions on former Confederates' political participation.[101]

The aftermath of the Civil War accelerated the process of a national African-American identity formation.[103] Some civil rights activists, such as W. E. B. Du Bois, disagree that identity was achieved after the Civil War.[104] African Americans in the post-Civil War era were faced with many rules and regulations that, even though they were "free", prevented them from enjoying the same amount of freedom as white citizens had.[105] Tens of thousands of Black northerners left homes and careers and also migrated to the defeated South, building schools, printing newspapers, and opening businesses. As Joel Williamson puts it:

Many of the migrants, women as well as men, came as teachers sponsored by a dozen or so benevolent societies, arriving in the still turbulent wake of Union armies. Others came to organize relief for the refugees.... Still others ... came south as religious missionaries.... Some came south as business or professional people seeking opportunity on this ... special Black frontier. Finally, thousands came as soldiers, and when the war was over, many of [their] young men remained there or after a stay of some months in the North, they returned in order to complete their education.[106]

 
A large group of African-American spectators stands on the banks of Buffalo Bayou to witness a baptism (ca. 1900).

Nadir of American race relations edit

The Jim Crow laws were state and local laws in the United States enacted between 1876 and 1965. They mandated de jure segregation in all public facilities, with a supposedly "separate but equal" status for Black Americans. In reality, this led to treatment and accommodations that were usually inferior to those provided for white Americans, systematizing a number of economic, educational and social disadvantages.[107]

In the face of years of mounting violence and intimidation directed at Blacks as well as whites sympathetic to their cause, the U.S. government retreated from its pledge to guarantee constitutional protections to freedmen and women. When President Rutherford B. Hayes withdrew Union troops from the South in 1877 as a result of a national compromise on the election, Black people lost most of their political power. Men like Benjamin "Pap" Singleton began speaking of leaving the South. This idea culminated in the 1879–80 movement of the Exodusters, who migrated to Kansas, where Blacks had much more freedom and it was easier to acquire land.[108]

 
2Sign for "Colored waiting room", Georgia, 1943

When Democrats took control of Tennessee in 1888, they passed laws making voter registration more complicated and ended the most competitive political state in the South. Voting by Black people in rural areas and small towns dropped sharply, as did voting by poor whites.[109][110]

From 1890 to 1908, starting with Mississippi and ending with Georgia, ten of eleven Southern states adopted new constitutions or amendments that effectively disenfranchised most Black people and many poor whites. Using a combination of provisions such as poll taxes, residency requirements and literacy tests, states dramatically decreased Black voter registration and turnout, in some cases to zero.[111] The grandfather clause was used in many states temporarily to exempt illiterate white voters from literacy tests. As power became concentrated under the Democratic Party in the South, the party positioned itself as a private club and instituted white primaries, closing Black people out of the only competitive contests. By 1910 one-party white rule was firmly established across the South.

Although African Americans quickly started litigation to challenge such provisions, early court decisions at the state and national level went against them. In Williams v. Mississippi (1898), the US Supreme Court upheld state provisions. This encouraged other Southern states to adopt similar measures over the next few years, as noted above. Booker T. Washington, of Tuskegee Institute secretly worked with Northern supporters to raise funds and provide representation for African Americans in additional cases, such as Giles v. Harris (1903) and Giles v. Teasley (1904), but again the Supreme Court upheld the states.[111]

Segregation for the first time became a standard legal process in the South; it was informal in Northern cities. Jim Crow limited Black access to transportation, schools, restaurants and other public facilities. Most southern blacks for decades continued to struggle in grinding poverty as agricultural, domestic and menial laborers. Many became sharecroppers, sharing the crop with the white land owners..

Racial terrorism edit

In 1865, the Ku Klux Klan, a secret white supremacist criminal organization dedicated to destroying the Republican Party in the South, especially by terrorizing Black leaders, was formed. Klansmen hid behind masks and robes to hide their identity while they carried out violence and property damage. The Klan used terrorism, especially murder and threats of murder, arson and intimidation. The Klan's excesses led to the passage of legislation against it, and with Federal enforcement, it was destroyed by 1871.[112]

The anti-Republican and anti-freedmen sentiment only briefly went underground, as violence arose in other incidents, especially after Louisiana's disputed state election in 1872, which contributed to the Colfax and Coushatta massacres in Louisiana in 1873 and 1874. Tensions and rumors were high in many parts of the South. When violence erupted, African Americans consistently were killed at a much higher rate than were European Americans. Historians of the 20th century have renamed events long called "riots" in southern history. The common stories featured whites heroically saving the community from marauding Black people. Upon examination of the evidence, historians have called numerous such events "massacres", as at Colfax, because of the disproportionate number of fatalities for Black people as opposed to whites. The mob violence there resulted in 40–50 Black people dead for each of the three whites killed.[113]

While not as widely known as the Klan, the paramilitary organizations that arose in the South during the mid-1870s as the white Democrats mounted a stronger insurgency, were more directed and effective than the Klan in challenging Republican governments, suppressing the Black vote and achieving political goals. Unlike the Klan, paramilitary members operated openly, often solicited newspaper coverage, and had distinct political goals: to turn Republicans out of office and suppress or dissuade Black voting in order to regain power in 1876. Groups included the White League, that started from white militias in Grant Parish, Louisiana, in 1874 and spread in the Deep South; the Red Shirts, that started in Mississippi in 1875 but had chapters arise and was prominent in the 1876 election campaign in South Carolina, as well as in North Carolina; and other White Line organizations such as rifle clubs.[114]

 
Robert McDaniels lynched. Apr. 13, 1937

The Jim Crow era accompanied the most cruel wave of "racial" suppression that America has yet experienced. Between 1890 and 1940, millions of African Americans were disenfranchised, killed, and brutalized. According to newspaper records kept at the Tuskegee Institute, about 5,000 men, women, and children were murdered in documented extrajudicial mob violence—called "lynchings." The journalist Ida B. Wells estimated that lynchings not reported by the newspapers, plus similar executions under the veneer of "due process", may have amounted to about 20,000 killings.[115]

Of the tens of thousands of lynchers and onlookers during this period, it is reported that fewer than 50 whites were ever indicted for their crimes, and only four were sentenced. Because Black people were disenfranchised, they could not sit on juries or have any part in the political process, including local offices. Meanwhile, the lynchings were used as a weapon of terror to keep millions of African-Americans living in a constant state of anxiety and fear.[116] Most Black people were denied their right to keep and bear arms under Jim Crow laws, and they were therefore unable to protect themselves or their families.[117]

Early civil rights movement edit

In response to these and other setbacks, in the summer of 1905, W. E. B. Du Bois and 28 other prominent, African-American men met secretly at Niagara Falls, Ontario. There, they produced a manifesto in which they called for an end to racial discrimination, full civil liberties for African Americans and recognition of human brotherhood. The organization which they established came to be called the Niagara Movement. After the notorious Springfield, Illinois race riot of 1908, a group of concerned Whites joined the leadership of the Niagara Movement and formed the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) a year later, in 1909. Under the leadership of Du Bois, the NAACP mounted legal challenges to segregation and it also lobbied legislatures on behalf of Black Americans.

While the NAACP used the court system to promote equality, at the local level, African Americans adopted a self-help strategy. They pooled their resources to create independent community and institutional lives for themselves. They established schools, churches, social welfare institutions, banks, African-American newspapers and small businesses which could serve their communities.[118] The main organizer of national and local self-help organizations was Alabama educator Booker T. Washington.[119]

Some Progressive Era reformers were concerned about the Black condition. In 1908 after the 1906 Atlanta Race Riot got him involved, Ray Stannard Baker published the book Following the Color Line: An Account of Negro Citizenship in the American Democracy, becoming the first prominent journalist to examine America's racial divide; it was extremely successful. Sociologist Rupert Vance says it is:

the best account of race relations in the South during the period—one that reads like field notes for the future historian. This account was written during the zenith of Washingtonian movement and shows the optimism that it inspired among both liberals and moderates. The book is also notable for its realistic accounts of Negro town life.[120]

Great Migration and the Harlem Renaissance edit

 
The Great Migration shown through changes in African American share of population in major U.S. cities, 1910–1940 and 1940–1970

During the first half of the 20th century, the largest internal population shift in U.S. history took place. Starting about 1910, through the Great Migration over five million African Americans made choices and "voted with their feet" by moving from the South to northern and western cities in hopes of escaping political discrimination and hatred, violence, finding better jobs, voting and enjoying greater equality and education for their children.[121]

In the 1920s, the concentration of Black people in New York led to the cultural movement known as the Harlem Renaissance, whose influence reached nationwide. Black intellectual and cultural circles were influenced by thinkers such as Aimé Césaire and Léopold Sédar Senghor, who celebrated Blackness, or négritude; arts and letters flourished. Writers Zora Neale Hurston, Langston Hughes, Nella Larsen, Claude McKay and Richard Wright; and artists Lois Mailou Jones, William H. Johnson, Romare Bearden, Jacob Lawrence and Archibald Motley gained prominence.[122]

The South Side of Chicago, a destination for many on the trains up from Mississippi, Arkansas and Louisiana, joined Harlem as a sort of Black capital for the nation. It generated flourishing businesses, music, arts and foods. A new generation of powerful African-American political leaders and organizations also came to the fore, Typified by Congressman William Dawson (1886–1970). Membership in the NAACP rapidly increased as it mounted an anti-lynching campaign in reaction to ongoing southern white violence against blacks. Marcus Garvey's Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League, the Nation of Islam, and union organizer A. Philip Randolph's Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters (part of the American Federation of labor) all were established during this period and found support among African Americans, who became urbanized.[123]

Black-owned businesses edit

Businesses operated at the local level, and included beauty shops, barber shops, funeral parlors and the like. Booker T. Washington organized them nationally into the National Negro Business League.[124] The more ambitious Black businessman with a larger vision avoided small towns and rural areas and headed to progressive large cities.[125] They sent their children to elite Black colleges such as Howard, Spellman, and Morehouse; by the 1970s they were accepted in more than token numbers at national schools such as the Ivy League. Graduates were hired by major national corporations. They were active in the Urban League, the United Negro College Fund and the NAACP, and were much more likely to be Episcopalians than Baptists.[126][127][128]

Women in the beauty business edit

Although most prominent African American businesses have been owned by men, women played a major role especially in the area of beauty. Standards of beauty were different for whites and Black people, and the Black community developed its own standards, with an emphasis on hair care. Beauticians could work out of their own homes, and did not need storefronts. As a result, Black beauticians were numerous in the rural South, despite the absence of cities and towns. They pioneered the use of cosmetics, at a time when rural white women in the South avoided them. As Blain Roberts has shown, beauticians offered their clients a space to feel pampered and beautiful in the context of their own community because, "Inside Black beauty shops, rituals of beautification converged with rituals of socialization." Beauty contests emerged in the 1920s, and in the white community they were linked to agricultural county fairs. By contrast in the Black community, beauty contests were developed out of the homecoming ceremonies at their high schools and colleges.[129][130] The most famous entrepreneur was Madame C. J. Walker (1867–1919); she built a national franchise business called Madame C. J. Walker Manufacturing Company based on her invention of the first successful hair straightening process.[131]

World War I edit

 
African American soldiers of the U.S. Army marching northwest of Verdun, France 5 November 1918
 
Soldiers of the 369th (15th N.Y.) who won the Croix de Guerre for gallantry in action, 1919

Soldiers edit

The U.S. armed forces remained segregated during World War I. Still, many African Americans eagerly volunteered to join the Allied cause following America's entry into the war. More than two million African-American men rushed to register for the draft. By the time of the armistice with Germany in November 1918, over 350,000 African Americans had served with the American Expeditionary Force on the Western Front.[132][133][134]

Most African American units were relegated to support roles and did not see combat. Still, African Americans played a significant role in America's war effort. Four African American regiments were integrated into French units because the French suffered heavy losses and badly needed men after three years of a terrible war. One of the most distinguished units was the 369th Infantry Regiment, known as the "Harlem Hellfighters", which was on the front lines for six months, longer than any other American unit in the war. 171 members of the 369th were awarded the Legion of Merit.[citation needed]

 
157th I.D. Red Hand flag[135] drawn by General Mariano Goybet

From May 1918 to November 1918, the 371st and the 372nd American Regiments were integrated under the 157th Red Hand Division[135] commanded by the French General Mariano Goybet. He was awarded the Distinguished Service Medal (U.S. Army) by General Pershing.[136] The African American Regiments earned glory in the decisive final offensive in Champagne region of France. The two Regiments were decorated by the French Croix de Guerre for their gallantry in the Meuse-Argonne Offensive.[137] · [138]

December 12, 1918

General Order No. 245

"The red hand division during nine days of violent fight was always an exceptional model for the victorious advance of the fourth army. Dear Friends of America you will be back home to the other side of the ocean, don' t forget ‘’ The Red Hand Division."

"Our friendship has been cemented in the blood of the brave and such a link will be never destroyed Remember your General who is proud to have commanded you and be sure of his endless recognition. ."

General Goybet commanding the 157th Division. [139]

During World War I, the 372nd Infantry Regiment was composed of segregated National Guard units as well as draftees.[140]

Among these National Guard units, the 1st District of Columbia was re-designated the 1st Battalion of the 372nd Infantry

 
Enlisted men of the 1st Separate Battalion, an all African-American unit, examining weapons in the old army arms room prior to World War I

In 1917, fearing espionage, D.C. National Guard elements were mobilized 12 days before the U.S. officially entered World War I to protect reservoirs and power plants around District of Columbia Military officials were concerned that too many of the D.C. units were made up of men with foreign roots, thus the job of protecting vital facilities fell to the all-black 1st Separate Infantry, the only unit the military believed could be trusted with this mission.

 
Colored messengers of Motorcycle Corps, 372nd Headquarters, who kept communication lines alive at all hours during the big drive in Champagne, Argonne and at Verdun.

Eventually the 1st Separate was mustered into active service and re-designated the 1st Battalion of the 372nd Infantry. In France, unsure of what to do with an African-American regiment, the 372nd was attached to the French Army's 157th "Red Hand" Division. The soldiers fought in Meuse-Argonne, Lorraine and Alsace, where they were awarded the Croix de Guerre—one of the highest honors bestowed by the French military. Général Goybet, the 157th commanding general, gave the unit a Red Hand insignia in honor of their service. The red hand appears today on the crest of the 372nd Military Police Battalion. Although many D.C. National Guard units were mobilized, the 372nd was the only one to actually see combat during the war.[141]

 
Distinctive unit Insignia: 372 MP Bn. Red hand on right side

Corporal Freddie Stowers of the 371st Infantry Regiment was posthumously awarded a Medal of Honor—the first African American to be so honored for actions in World War I. During action in France, Stowers had led an assault on German trenches, continuing to lead and encourage his men even after being wounded twice. Stowers died from his wounds, but his men continued the fight on a German machine gun nest near Bussy farm in Champagne, and eventually defeated the German troops.[142]

 
Stowers' sisters, Georgina Palmer and Mary Bowens, with Barbara Bush and President George H.W. Bush at the Medal of Honor presentation ceremony

Stowers was recommended for the Medal of Honor shortly after his death, but according to the Army, the nomination was misplaced. Many believed the recommendation had been intentionally ignored due to institutional racism in the Armed Forces. In 1990, under pressure from Congress, the Defense Department launched an investigation. Based on findings from this investigation, the Army Decorations Board approved the award of the Medal of Honor to Stowers. On April 24, 1991–73 years after he was killed in action—Stowers' two surviving sisters received the Medal of Honor from President George H. W. Bush at the White House.[143]

Home front and postwar edit

With an enormous demand for expansion of the defense industries, the new draft law in effect, and the cut off of immigration from Europe, demand was very high for underemployed farmers from the South. Hundreds of thousands of African-Americans took the trains to Northern industrial centers in a dramatic historical event known as the Great Migration. Migrants going to Pittsburgh and surrounding mill towns in western Pennsylvania between 1890 and 1930 faced racial discrimination and limited economic opportunities. The Black population in Pittsburgh jumped from 6,000 in 1880 to 27,000 in 1910. Many took highly paid, skilled jobs in the steel mills. Pittsburgh's Black population increased to 37,700 in 1920 (6.4% of the total) while the Black element in Homestead, Rankin, Braddock, and others nearly doubled. They succeeded in building effective community responses that enabled the survival of new communities.[144][145] Historian Joe Trotter explains the decision process:

Although African-Americans often expressed their views of the Great Migration in biblical terms and received encouragement from northern black newspapers, railroad companies, and industrial labor agents, they also drew upon family and friendship networks to help in the move to Western Pennsylvania. They formed migration clubs, pooled their money, bought tickets at reduced rates, and often moved ingroups. Before they made the decision to move, they gathered information and debated the pros and cons of the process....In barbershops, poolrooms, and grocery stores, in churches, lodge halls, and clubhouses, and in private homes, southern blacks discussed, debated, and decided what was good and what was bad about moving to the urban North.[146]

After the war ended and the soldiers returned home, tensions were very high, with serious labor union strikes and inter-racial riots in major cities. The summer of 1919 was known as the Red Summer with outbreaks of racial violence killing about 1,000 people across the nation, most of whom were Black.[147][148]

Nevertheless, the newly established Black communities in the North nearly all endured. Joe Trotter explains how the Blacks built new institutions for their new communities in the Pittsburgh area:

Black churches, fraternal orders, and newspapers (especially the Pittsburgh Courier); organizations such as the NAACP, Urban League, and Garvey Movement; social clubs, restaurants, and baseball teams; hotels, beauty shops, barber shops, and taverns, all proliferated.[149]

New Deal edit

 
WPA poster promoting the benefits of employment

The Great Depression hit Black America hard. In 1930, it was reported that 4 out of 5 Black people lived in the South, the average life expectancy for Black people was 15 years less than whites, and the Black infant mortality rate at 12% was double that of whites.[150] In Chicago, Black people made up 4% of the population and 16% of the unemployed while in Pittsburgh blacks were 8% of the population and 40% of the unemployed.[151] In January 1934, the journalist Lorena Hickok reported from rural Georgia that she had seen "half-starved Whites and Blacks struggle in competition for less to eat than my dog gets at home, for the privilege of living in huts that are infinitely less comfortable than his kennel".[152] She also described most Southern Black people who made worked as sharecroppers as living under a system very close to slavery.[152] A visiting British journalist wrote she "had traveled over most of Europe and part of Africa, but I have never seen such terrible sights as I saw yesterday among the sharecroppers of Arkansas".[153]

The New Deal did not have a specific program for Black people only, but it sought to incorporate them in all the relief programs that it began.[154][155] The most important relief agencies were the CCC for young men (who worked in segregated units), the FERA relief programs in 1933–35 (run by local towns and cities), and especially the WPA, which employed 2,000,000 or more workers nationwide under federal control, 1935–42. All races had had the same wage rates and working conditions in the WPA.[156]

A rival federal agency was the Public Works Administration (PWA), headed by long-time civil rights activist Harold Ickes. It set quotas for private firms hiring skilled and unskilled Black people in construction projects financed through the PWA, overcoming the objections of labor unions. In this way, the New Deal ensured that blacks were 13% of the unskilled PWA jobs in Chicago, 60% in Philadelphia and 71% in Jacksonville, Florida; their share of the skilled jobs was 4%, 6%, and 17%, respectively.[157] In the Department of Agriculture, there was a lengthy bureaucratic struggle in 1933–35 between one faction which favored rising prices for farmers vs. another faction which favored reforms to assist sharecroppers, especially Black ones. When one Agriculture Department official, Alger Hiss, in early 1935 wrote up a directive to ensure that Southern landlords were paying sharecroppers for their labor (which most of them did not), Senator Ellison D. Smith stormed into his office and shouted: "Young fella, you can't do this to my niggers, paying checks to them".[158] The Agriculture Secretary, Henry A. Wallace, sided with Smith and agreed to cancel the directive.[159] As it turned out, the most effective way for Black sharecroppers to escape a life of poverty in the South was to move to the North or California.

An immediate response was a shift in the Black vote in Northern cities from the GOP to the Democrats (blacks seldom voted in the South.)[160] In Southern states where few Black people voted, Black leaders seized the opportunity to work inside the new federal agencies as social workers and administrators, with an eye to preparing a new generation who would become leaders of grass-roots constituencies that could be mobilized at some future date for civil rights.[161] President Franklin D. Roosevelt appointed the first federal black judge, William H. Hastie, and created an unofficial "black cabinet" led by Mary McLeod Bethune to advise him.[162] Roosevelt ordered that federal agencies such as the CCC, WPA and PWA were not to discriminate against Black Americans.[162] The president's wife, Eleanor Roosevelt (who was a close friend of Bethune's), was notably sympathetic towards African-Americans and constantly in private urged her husband to do more to try help Black Americans.[162] The fact that the Civil Works Administration paid the same wages to Black workers as white workers sparked much resentment in the South and as early as 1933 conservative Southern politicians who claiming that federal relief payments were causing Black people to move to the cities to become a "permanent welfare class".[163] Studies showed that Black people were twice likely to be unemployed as whites, and one-fifth of all people receiving federal relief payments were Black, which was double their share of the population.[164]

In Chicago the Black community had been a stronghold of the Republican machine, but in the Great Depression the machine fell apart. Voters and leaders moved en masse into the Democratic Party as the New Deal offered relief programs and the city Democratic machine offered suitable positions in the Democratic Party for leaders such as William Dawson, who went to Congress.[165]

Militants demanded a federal anti-lynching bill, but President Roosevelt knew it would never pass Congress but would split his New Deal coalition.[166] Because conservative white Southerners tended to vote as a bloc for the Democratic Party with all of the Senators and Congressmen from the South in the 1930s being Democrats, this tended to pull the national Democratic Party to the right on many issues while Southern politicians formed a powerful bloc in Congress.[167] When a Black minister, Marshall L. Shepard, delivered the opening prayer at the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia in 1936, Senator Ellison D. Smith stormed out, screaming: "This mongrel meeting ain't no place for a white man!"[167] Though Smith's reaction was extreme, other Democratic politicians from the South made it clear to Roosevelt that they were very displeased. In the 1936 election, African-Americans who could vote overwhelmingly did so for Roosevelt, marking the first time that a Democratic candidate for president had won the Black vote.[168]

In November 1936, the American duo Buck and Bubbles became the first Black people to appear on television, albeit on a British television channel.[169]

In April 1937, Congressman Earl C. Michener read out on the floor of the House of Representatives an account of the lynching of Roosevelt Townes and Robert McDaniels in Duck Hill, Mississippi on 13 April 1937, describing in much detail how a white mob tied two Black men to a tree, tortured them with blowtorches, and finally killed them.[170] Michener introduced an anti-lynching bill that passed the House, but which was stopped in the Senate as Southern senators filibustered the bill until it was withdrawn on 21 February 1938.[171] Both civil rights leaders and the First Lady, Eleanor Roosevelt, pressed President Roosevelt to support the anti-lynching bill, but his support was half-hearted at best.[172] Roosevelt told Walter Francis White of the NAACP that he personally supported the anti-lynching bill, but that: "I did not choose the tools with which I must work. Had I been permitted to choose them I would have selected quite different ones. But I've got to get legislation passed to save America. The Southerners by reason of the seniority rule in Congress are chairmen or occupy strategic places on most of the Senate and House committees. If I came out for the antilynching bill now, they will block every bill I ask Congress to pass to keep America from collapsing. I just can't take the risk".[172]

Through Roosevelt was sympathetic, and his wife even more so towards the plight of African-Americans, but the power of the Southern Democratic bloc in Congress, whom he did not wish to take on, limited his options.[172] Through not explicitly designed to assist Black Americans, Roosevelt supported the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, which imposed a national minimum wage of 40 cents per hour and a forty-hour work week while banning child labor, which was intended to assist poorer Americans.[173] The Southern congressional bloc were vehemently opposed to the Fair Labor Standards Act, which they saw as an attack on the entire Southern way of life, which was based upon extremely low wages (for example the minimum wage was 50 cents per day in South Carolina), and caused some of them to break with Roosevelt.[174] In 1938, Roosevelt campaigned in the Democratic primaries to defeat three conservative Southern Democratic senators, Walter F. George, Millard Tydings, and Ellison "Cotton Ed" Smith, whom were all returned.[175] Later in 1938, the conservative Southern Democrats allied themselves with conservative Republicans, forming an alliance in Congress which sharply limited Roosevelt's ability to pass liberal legislation.[176]

After Congress passed the Selective Service Act in September 1940 establishing the draft, A. Philip Randolph, the president of all black Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters union had his union issue a resolution calling for the government to desegregate the military.[177] As the First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt had attended the meeting of the brotherhood that passed the resolution, it was widely believed that the president was supportive.[177] Randolph subsequently visited the White House on 27 September 1940, where President Roosevelt seemed to be equally sympathetic.[178] Randolph felt very betrayed where he learned the military was to remain segregated after all despite the president's warm words.[179] Roosevelt had begun a program of rearmament, and feeling the president was not to be trusted, Randolph formed the March on Washington Movement, announcing plans for a huge civil rights march in Washington DC that would demand desegregation of the military and the factories in the defense industry on 1 July 1941.[179]

In June 1941 as the deadline for the march approached, Roosevelt asked for it to be cancelled, saying that 100, 000 Black people demonstrating in Washington would create problems for him.[179] On 18 June 1941, Randolph met with Roosevelt with the mayor of New York, Fiorello H. La Guardia serving as a mediator, where in a compromise it was agreed that the march would be cancelled in exchange for Executive Order 8802, which banned discrimination in factories making weapons for the military.[180] In 1941, the Roosevelt administration, through officially neutral, was leaning in very Allied direction with the United States providing weapons to Great Britain and China (to be joined by the Soviet Union after 22 June 1941), and the president needed the co-operation of Congress as much possible, where isolationist voices were frequently heard. Roosevelt argued to Randolph that he could not antagonize the powerful bloc of conservative Southern Democrats in Congress, and desegregation of the military was out of the question as the Southern Democrats would never accept it; by contrast, as La Guardia pointed out, most of the factories in the defense industry were located in California, the Midwest and the Northeast.[180]

Cotton edit

The largest group of Black people worked in the cotton farms of the Deep South as sharecroppers or tenant farmers; a few owned their farms. Large numbers of whites also were tenant farmers and sharecroppers. Tenant farming characterized the cotton and tobacco production in the post-Civil War South. As the agricultural economy plummeted in the early 1930s, all farmers in all parts of the nation were badly hurt. Worst hurt were the tenant farmers (who had relatively more control) and sharecroppers (who had less control), as well as daily laborers (mostly Black, with least control).[181]

The problem was very low prices for farm products and the New Deal solution was to raise them by cutting production. It accomplished this in the South by the AAA, which gave landowners acreage reduction contracts, by which they were paid to not grow cotton or tobacco on a portion of their land. By law, they were required to pay the tenant farmers and sharecroppers on their land a portion of the money, but some cheated on this provision, hurting their tenants and croppers. The farm wage workers who worked directly for the landowner were mostly the ones who lost their jobs. For most tenants and sharecroppers the AAA was a major help. Researchers at the time concluded, "To the extent that the AAA control-program has been responsible for the increased price [of cotton], we conclude that it has increased the amount of goods and services consumed by the cotton tenants and croppers." Furthermore, the landowners typically let their tenants and croppers use the land taken out of production for their own personal use in growing food and feed crops, which further increased their standard of living. Another consequence was that the historic high levels of turnover from year to year declined sharply, as tenants and coppers tend to stay with the same landowner. Researchers concluded, "As a rule, planters seem to prefer Negroes to whites as tenants and coppers."[182]

Once mechanization came to cotton (after 1945), the tenants and sharecroppers were largely surplus; they moved to towns and cities.[citation needed]

World War II edit

 
Black soldiers tracking a sniper Omaha Beachhead, near Vierville-sur-Mer, France. 10 June 1944

A call for "The Double Victory" edit

The African-American newspaper The Pittsburgh Courier called for the "double victory" or "Double V campaign" in a 1942 editorial, saying that all Black people should work for "victory over our enemies at home and victory over our enemies on the battlefield abroad".[183] The newspaper argued that a victory of the Axis powers, especially Nazi Germany, would be a disaster for African-Americans while at the same time the war presented the opportunity "to persuade, embarrass, compel and shame our government and our nation...into a more enlightened attitude towards a tenth of its people".[183] The slogan of a "double victory" over fascism abroad and racism at home was widely taken up by African-Americans during the war.[183]

Wartime service edit

 
Eight Tuskegee Airmen in front of a P-40 fighter aircraft

Over 1.9 million Black people served in uniform during World War II. They served in segregated units.[184][185] Black women served in the Army's WAAC and WAC, but very few served in the Navy.[186]

The draft starkly exposed the poor living conditions of most African-Americans with the Selective Service Boards turning down 46% of the Black men called up on health grounds as compared to 30% of the white men called up.[183] At least a third of the black men in the South called up by the draft boards turned out to be illiterate.[183] Southern Black people fared badly on the Army General Classification Test (AGCT), an aptitude test designed to determine the most suitable role for those who were drafted, and which was not an IQ test.[187] Of the Black men from the South drafted, 84% fell into the two lowest categories on the AGCT.[188] Owing to the high failure rate caused by the almost non-existent education system for African-Americans in the South, the Army was forced to offer remedial instruction for Afro-Americans who fell into the lower categories of the AGCT.[188] By 1945, about 150, 000 Black men had learned how to read and write while in the Army.[188] The poor living conditions in rural America which afflicted both white and Black Americans led the Army to undertake remedial health work as well. Army optometrists fitted 2.25 million men suffering from poor eyesight with eyeglasses to allow them to be drafted while Army dentists fitted 2.5 million draftees who would have been otherwise disqualified for the bad state of their teeth with dentures.[189]

Most of the Army's 231 training camps were located in the South, which was mostly rural and where land was cheaper.[190] Black people from outside of the South that were sent to the training camps found life in the South almost unbearable.[191] Tensions at army and navy training bases between Black and white trainees resulted in several outbreaks of racial violence with Black trainees sometimes being lynched.[191] In the so-called Battle of Bamber Bridge on 24–25 June 1943 in the Lancashire town of Bamber Bridge saw a shoot-out between white and Black soldiers that left one dead.[192] In an attempt to solve the problem of racial violence, the War Department in 1943 commissioned the director Frank Capra to make the propaganda film The Negro Soldier.[191]

The segregated 92nd Division, which served in Italy, was noted for the antagonistic relations between its white officers and Black soldiers.[188] In an attempt to ease the racial tensions, the 92nd Division was integrated in 1944 by having the all Japanese-American 442nd Regimental Combat Team together with one white regiment assigned to it.[188] The segregated 93rd Division, which served in the Pacific, was assigned "mopping up" duties on the islands that the Americans mostly controlled.[188] Black servicemen greatly resented segregation and those serving in Europe complained that German POWs were served better food than what they were.[191]

The Navy was segregated and Black sailors were usually assigned menial work such as stevedores.[193] At Port Chicago on 17 July 1944, while mostly Black stevedores were loading up two Navy supply ships, an explosion occurred that killed 320 men, of which 202 were Black.[194] The explosion was widely blamed on the lack of training for Black stevedores, and 50 of the survivors of the explosion refused an order to return to work, demanding safety training first.[195] At the subsequent court martial for the "Port Chicago 50" on the charges of mutiny, their defense lawyer, Thurgood Marshall stated: "Negroes in the Navy don't mind loading ammunition. They just want to know why they are the only ones doing the loading! They want to know why they are segregated; why they don't get promoted, and why the Navy disregarded official warnings by the San Francisco waterfront unions...that an explosion was inevitable if they persisted in using untrained seamen in the loading of ammunition".[195] Though the sailors were convicted, the Port Chicago disaster led the Navy in August 1944 to allow Black sailors to serve alongside white sailors on ships, through Black people could only make up 10% of the crew.[195]

Through the Army was reluctant to send Black units into combat, famous segregated units, such as the Tuskegee Airmen and the U.S. 761st Tank Battalion proved their value in combat.[196] Approximately 75 percent of the soldiers who served in the European theater as truckers for the Red Ball Express and kept Allied supply lines open were African-American.[197] During the crisis of the Battle of the Bulge in December 1944, the Army allowed several integrated infantry platoons to be formed, through these were broken up once the crisis passed.[193] However, the experiment of the integrated platoons in December 1944 showed that integration did not mean the collapse of military discipline as many claimed that it would, and was a factor in the later desegregation of the armed forces.[193] A total of 708 African Americans were killed in combat during World War II.[198]

The distinguished service of these units was a factor in President Harry S. Truman's order to end discrimination in the Armed Forces in July 1948, with the promulgation of Executive Order 9981. This led in turn to the integration of the Air Force and the other services by the early 1950s.[199][200] In his book A Rising Wind, Walter Francis White of the NAACP wrote: "World War II has immeasurably magnified the Negro's awareness of the American profession and practice of democracy...[Black veterans] will return home convinced that whatever betterment of their lot is achieved must come largely from their own efforts. They will return determined to use those efforts to the utmost".[201]

Home front edit

 
Rosie the Riveter

Due to massive shortages as a result of the American entry into World War II, defense employers from Northern and Western cities went to the South to convince blacks and whites there to leave the region in promise of higher wages and better opportunities. As a result, African Americans left the South in large numbers to munitions centers in the North and West to take advantage of the shortages caused by the war, sparking the Second Great Migration. While they somewhat lived in better conditions than the South (for instance, they could vote and send children to better schools), they nevertheless faced widespread discrimination due to bigotry and fear of competition of housing and jobs among white residents.[citation needed]

When Roosevelt learned that many companies in the defense industry were violating the spirit, if not the letter of Executive Order 8802 by only employing Black people in menial positions such as janitors and denying them the opportunity to work as highly paid skilled laborers, he significantly strengthened the Fair Employment Practice Committee (FEPC) with orders to fine the corporations that did not treat their Black employees equally.[202] In 1943, Roosevelt gave the FEPC a budget of half-million dollars and replaced the unpaid volunteers who had previously staffed the FEPC with a paid staff concentrated in regional headquarters across the nation with instructions to inspect the defense industry's factories to ensure the spirit and letter of Executive Order 8802 was being obeyed.[202] Roosevelt believed that having Black men and women employed in the defense industry working as skilled laborers would give them far higher wages than what they ever had before, and ultimately form the nucleus of a Black middle class.[202] When the president learned that some unions were pushing for black employees to be given menial "auxiliary" jobs in the factories, he instructed the National Labor Relations Board to decertify those unions.[202] In 1944, when the union for trolley drivers in Philadelphia went on strike to protest plans to hire African-Americans as trolley drivers, Roosevelt sent in troops to break the strike.[202] In 1942, Black people made up 3% of the workforce in the defense industry; by 1945 Black people made up 8% of the workforce in defense industry factories (Black people made up 10% of the population).[202]

Racial tensions were also high between whites and ethnic minorities that cities like Chicago, Detroit, Los Angeles, and Harlem experienced race riots in 1943.[203] In May 1943, in Mobile, Alabama, when the local shipyard promoted some Black men up to be trained as welders, white workers rioted and seriously injured 11 of their Black co-workers.[192] In Los Angeles, the Zoot Suit riots of 3–8 June 1943 saw white servicemen attacking Chicano (Mexican-American) and Black youths for wearing zoot suits.[192] On 15 June 1943, in Beaumont, Texas, a pogrom saw a white mob smash up Black homes while lynching 2 Black men.[192] In Detroit, which expanded massively during the war years with 50, 000 Black people from the South and 200, 000 "hillbilly" whites from Appalachia moving to the city to work in the factories, competition for sparse rental housing had pushed tensions to the brink.[192] On 20 June 1943, false rumors that a white mob had lynched 3 Black men led to an outbreak of racial rioting in Detroit that left 34 dead, of whom 25 were Black.[192] On 1–2 August 1943, another race riot in Harlem left 6 Black people dead.[192]

Politically, Black people left the Republican Party and joined the Democratic New Deal Coalition of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, whom they widely admired.[204] The political leaders, ministers and newspaper editors who shaped opinion resolved on a Double V campaign: Victory over German and Japanese fascism abroad, and victory over discrimination at home. Black newspapers created the Double V campaign to build Black morale and head off radical action.[205] During the war years, the NAACP expanded tenfold, having over half a million members by 1945.[183] The new civil rights group Committee of Racial Equality (CORE), founded in 1942, started demonstrations demanding desegregation of buses, theaters and restaurants.[183] At one CORE demonstration outside a segregated restaurant in Washington, DC in 1944 had signs reading "We Die Together', Let's Eat Together" and "Are you for Hitler's Way or the American Way?".[183] In 1944, the Swedish economist Gunnar Myrdal published his bestselling book An American Dilemma: The Negro Problem and Modern Democracy where he described in much detail the effects of white supremacy upon Black Americans, and predicated in the long run the Jim Crow regime was unsustainable, as he argued that after the war African-Americans would be not willing to accept a permanent second class status.[206]

Most Black women had been farm laborers or domestics before the war.[207] Despite discrimination and segregated facilities throughout the South, they escaped the cotton patch and took blue-collar jobs in the cities. Working with the federal Fair Employment Practices Committee, the NAACP and CIO unions, these Black women fought a Double V campaign against the Axis abroad and against restrictive hiring practices at home. Their efforts redefined citizenship, equating their patriotism with war work, and seeking equal employment opportunities, government entitlements, and better working conditions as conditions appropriate for full citizens.[208] In the South, Black women worked in segregated jobs; in the West and most of the North they were integrated, but wildcat strikes erupted in Detroit, Baltimore, and Evansville where white migrants from the South refused to work alongside Black women.[209][210] The most largest of the "hate strikes" was the strike by white women at the Western Electric factory in Baltimore, who objected to sharing a bathroom with Black women.[192]

Hollywood edit

"Stormy Weather" (1943) (starring Lena Horne, Bill "Bojangles" Robinson, and Cab Calloway's Band), along with Cabin in the Sky (1943) (starring Ethel Waters, Eddie "Rochester" Anderson, Lena Horne, and Louis "Satchmo" Armstrong), and other musicals of the 1940s opened new roles for Black people in Hollywood. They broke through old stereotypes and far surpassed the limited, poorly paid roles available in race films produced for all-Black audiences.[211][212]

Second Great Migration edit

 
Graph showing the percentage of the African American population living in the American South, 1790–2010.
 
First and Second Great Migrations shown through changes in African American share of population in major U.S. cities, 1916–1930 and 1940–1970

The Second Great Migration was the migration of more than 5 million African Americans from the South to the other three regions of the United States. It took place from 1941 through World War II, and it lasted until 1970.[213] It was much larger and of a different character than the first Great Migration (1910–1940). Some historians prefer to distinguish between the movements for those reasons.

In the Second Great Migration, more than five million African Americans moved to cities in states in the Northeast, Midwest, and West, including the West Coast, where many skilled jobs in the defense industry were concentrated. More of these migrants were already urban laborers who came from the cities of the South. They were better educated and they had better skills than the people who did not migrate.[213]

Compared to the more rural migrants of the period 1910–40, many African Americans in the South were already living in urban areas and had urban job skills before they relocated. They moved to take jobs in the burgeoning industrial cities and especially the many jobs in the defense industry during World War II. Workers who were limited to segregated, low-skilled jobs in Southern cities were able to get highly skilled, well-paid jobs at West Coast shipyards.[213] The effect of racially homogeneous communities composed largely of Black immigrants that formed because of spatial segregation in destination cities was that they were largely influenced by the Southern culture they brought with them. The food, music and even the discriminatory white police presence in these neighborhoods were all imported to a certain extent from the collective experiences of the highly concentrated African-American migrants.[214] Writers have often assumed that Southern migrants contributed disproportionately to changes in the African-American family in the inner city. However, census data for 1940 through 1990 show that these families actually exhibited more traditional family patterns—more children living with two parents, more ever-married women living with their spouses, and fewer never-married mothers.[215]

By the end of the Second Great Migration, African Americans had become an urbanized population. More than 80 percent of them lived in cities. Fifty-three percent of them remained in the Southern United States, 40 percent of them lived in the Northeast and North Central states and 7 percent of them lived in the West.[213]

Civil rights era edit

The Supreme Court handed down a landmark decision in the case of Brown v. Board of Education (1954) of Topeka. This decision applied to public facilities, especially public schools. Reforms occurred slowly and only after concerted activism by African Americans. The ruling also brought new momentum to the Civil Rights Movement. Boycotts against segregated public transportation systems sprang up in the South, the most notable of which was the Montgomery bus boycott.[citation needed]

Civil rights groups such as the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) organized across the South with tactics such as boycotts, voter registration campaigns, Freedom Rides and other nonviolent direct action, such as marches, pickets and sit-ins to mobilize around issues of equal access and voting rights. Southern segregationists fought back to block reform. The conflict grew to involve steadily escalating physical violence, bombings and intimidation by Southern whites. Law enforcement responded to protesters with batons, electric cattle prods, fire hoses, attack dogs and mass arrests.[citation needed]

In Virginia, state legislators, school board members and other public officials mounted a campaign of obstructionism and outright defiance to integration called Massive Resistance. It entailed a series of actions to deny state funding to integrated schools and instead fund privately run "segregation academies" for white students. Farmville, Virginia, in Prince Edward County, was one of the plaintiff African-American communities involved in the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court decision. As a last-ditch effort to avoid court-ordered desegregation, officials in the county shut down the county's entire public school system in 1959 and it remained closed for five years.[216] White students were able to attend private schools established by the community for the sole purpose of circumventing integration. The largely Black rural population of the county had little recourse. Some families were split up as parents sent their children to live with relatives in other locales to attend public school; but the majority of Prince Edward's more than 2,000 black children, as well as many poor whites, simply remained unschooled until federal court action forced the schools to reopen five years later.[citation needed]

 
Martin Luther King Jr. delivers his famous "I Have a Dream" speech during the March on Washington

Perhaps the high point of the Civil Rights Movement was the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, which brought more than 250,000 marchers to the grounds of the Lincoln Memorial and the National Mall in Washington, D.C., to speak out for an end to southern racial violence and police brutality, equal opportunity in employment, equal access in education and public accommodations. The organizers of the march were called the "Big Six" of the Civil Rights Movement: Bayard Rustin the strategist who has been called the "invisible man" of the Civil Rights Movement; labor organizer and initiator of the march, A. Philip Randolph; Roy Wilkins of the NAACP; Whitney Young, Jr., of the National Urban League; Martin Luther King Jr., of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC); James Farmer of the Congress on Racial Equality (CORE); and John Lewis of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). Also active behind the scenes and sharing the podium with King was Dorothy Height, head of the National Council of Negro Women. It was at this event, on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, that King delivered his historic "I Have a Dream" speech.[citation needed]

This march, the 1963 Birmingham Children's Crusade, and other events were credited with putting pressure on President John F. Kennedy, and then Lyndon B. Johnson, that culminated in the passage the Civil Rights Act of 1964 that banned discrimination in public accommodations, employment, and labor unions.[citation needed]

 
President Johnson signs the historic Civil Rights Act of 1964.

The "Mississippi Freedom Summer" of 1964 brought thousands of idealistic youth, black and white, to the state to run "freedom schools", to teach basic literacy, history and civics. Other volunteers were involved in voter registration drives. The season was marked by harassment, intimidation and violence directed at civil rights workers and their host families. The disappearance of three youths, James Chaney, Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner in Philadelphia, Mississippi, captured the attention of the nation. Six weeks later, searchers found the savagely beaten body of Chaney, a Black man, in a muddy dam alongside the remains of his two white companions, who had been shot to death. There was national outrage at the escalating injustices of the "Mississippi Blood Summer", as it by then had come to be known, and at the brutality of the murders.[citation needed]

In 1965, the Selma Voting Rights Movement, its Selma to Montgomery marches, and the tragic murders of two activists associated with the march, inspired President Lyndon B. Johnson to call for the full Voting Rights Act of 1965, which struck down barriers to black enfranchisement. In 1966 the Chicago Open Housing Movement, followed by the passage of the 1968 Fair Housing Act, was a capstone to more than a decade of major legislation during the civil rights movement.[citation needed]

By this time, African Americans who questioned the effectiveness of nonviolent protest had gained a greater voice. More militant Black leaders, such as Malcolm X of the Nation of Islam and Eldridge Cleaver of the Black Panther Party, called for Black people to defend themselves, using violence, if necessary. From the mid-1960s to the mid-1970s, the Black Power movement urged African Americans to look to Africa for inspiration and emphasized Black solidarity, rather than integration.[citation needed]

Post-civil rights era edit

 
The first African-American President of the United States, Barack Obama

Politically and economically, Black people have made substantial strides in the post-civil rights era. Civil rights leader Jesse Jackson, who ran for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination in 1984 and 1988, brought unprecedented support and leverage to Black people in politics.[217]

In 1989, Douglas Wilder became the first African-American elected governor in U.S. history. In 1992 Carol Moseley-Braun of Illinois became the first Black woman elected to the U.S. Senate. There were 8,936 Black officeholders in the United States in 2000, showing a net increase of 7,467 since 1970. In 2001 there were 484 Black mayors.[218]

The 39 African American members of Congress form the Congressional Black Caucus, which serves as a political bloc for issues relating to African Americans. The appointment of Black people to high federal offices—including General Colin Powell, Chairman of the U.S. Armed Forces Joint Chiefs of Staff, 1989–93, United States Secretary of State, 2001–05; Condoleezza Rice, Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs, 2001–04, Secretary of State in, 2005–09; Ron Brown, United States Secretary of Commerce, 1993–96; and Supreme Court justices Thurgood Marshall and Clarence Thomas—also demonstrates the increasing visibility of Black people in the political arena.[219]

Economic progress for Black people reaching the extremes of wealth has been slow. According to Forbes richest lists, Oprah Winfrey was the richest African American of the 20th century and has been the world's only Black billionaire in 2004, 2005, and 2006.[220] Not only was Winfrey the world's only Black billionaire but she has been the only Black person on the Forbes 400 list nearly every year since 1995. BET founder Bob Johnson briefly joined her on the list from 2001 to 2003 before his ex-wife acquired part of his fortune; although he returned to the list in 2006, he did not make it in 2007. With Winfrey the only African American wealthy enough to rank among America's 400 richest people,[221] African Americans currently comprise 0.25% of America's economic elite and comprise 13.6% of the U.S. population.[222]

The dramatic political breakthrough came in the 2008 election, with the election of Barack Obama, the son of a Black Kenyan father and a white American mother. He won overwhelming support from African-American voters in the Democratic primaries, even as his main opponent Hillary Clinton had the support of many Black politicians. African Americans continued to support Obama throughout his term.[223] After completing his first term, Obama ran for a second term. In 2012, he won the presidential election against candidate Mitt Romney and was re-elected as the president of the United States.

The post-civil rights era is also notable for the New Great Migration, in which millions of African Americans have returned to the South including Texas, Georgia, Florida and North Carolina, often to pursue increased economic opportunities in now-desegregated southern cities.[citation needed]

On August 11, 2020, Senator Kamala Harris (D-CA) was announced as the first African-American woman to run for vice-president on a major party presidential ticket.[224] She was elected vice president in the 2020 United States presidential election.

Social issues edit

After the civil rights movement gains of the 1950s–1970s, due to government neglect, unfavorable social policies, high poverty rates, changes implemented in the criminal justice system and laws, and a breakdown in traditional family units, African-American communities have been suffering from extremely high incarceration rates. African Americans have the highest imprisonment rate of any major ethnic group in the world.[225] The Southern states, which historically had been involved in slavery and post-Reconstruction oppression, now produce the highest rates of incarceration and death penalty application.[226][227]

Historiography edit

The history of slavery in the United States has always been a major research topic among white scholars, but until the 1950s, they generally focused on the political and constitutional themes of slavery which were debated over by white politicians; they did not study the lives of the enslaved black people. During Reconstruction and the late 19th century, Black people became major actors in the South. The Dunning School of white scholars generally cast Black people as pawns of white Carpetbaggers during this period, but W. E. B. Du Bois, a Black historian, and Ulrich B. Phillips, a white historian, studied the African-American experience in depth. Du Bois' study of Reconstruction provided a more objective context for evaluating its achievements and weaknesses; Additionally, he conducted studies of contemporary Black life. Phillips set the main topics of inquiry that still guide the analysis of slave economics.[citation needed]

During the first half of the 20th century, Carter G. Woodson was the major Black scholar who studied and promoted the Black historical experience. Woodson insisted that the scholarly study of the African-American experience should be sound, creative, restorative, and, most important, it should be directly relevant to the Black community. He popularized Black history with a variety of innovative strategies, including the founding of the Association for the Study of Negro Life, the development of outreach activities, the creation of Negro History Week (now Black History Month, in February), and the publication of a popular Black history magazine. Woodson democratized, legitimized, and popularized Black history.[228]

Benjamin Quarles (1904–1996) had a significant impact on the teaching of African-American history. Quarles and John Hope Franklin provided a bridge between the work of historians in historically Black colleges, such as Woodson, and the Black history that is now well established in mainline universities. Quarles grew up in Boston, attended Shaw University as an undergraduate, and received a graduate degree at the University of Wisconsin. In 1953, he began teaching at Morgan State College in Baltimore, where he stayed, despite the fact that he received a lucrative offer from Johns Hopkins University. Quarles' books included The Negro in the Civil War (1953), The Negro in the American Revolution (1961), Lincoln and the Negro (1962), The Negro in the Making of America (1964, updated 1987), and Black Abolitionists (1969), which are all narrative accounts of critical wartime episodes that focused on how Black people interacted with their white allies.[229]

Black historians attempted to reverse centuries of ignorance. While they were not alone in advocating a new examination of slavery and racism in the United States, the study of African-American history has frequently been a political and scholarly struggle which has been waged by historians who wish to refute incorrect assumptions. One of the foremost assumptions was the belief that enslaved people did not rebel because they were passive. A series of historians transformed the image of African Americans, revealing that they had a much richer and a more complex experience. Historians such as Leon F. Litwack documented how former enslaved people fought to keep their families together and he also documented that they struggled against tremendous odds in order to define themselves as free people. Other historians wrote about rebellions, both small and large.

In the 21st century, Black history is considered mainstream. Since it was recognized by President Gerald Ford in 1976, "Black History Month" is celebrated in the United States every year during the month of February. Proponents of Black history believe that it promotes diversity, develops self-esteem, and corrects myths and stereotypes. Opponents of it argue that such curricula are dishonest, divisive, and lack academic credibility and rigor.[230]

In 2021, College Board announced that it will pilot an AP African American Studies course between 2022 and 2024. The course is expected to be launched in 2024.[231] The goal of the course is to expand student understanding of black history, culture, art, literature, and academics.[232]

Knowledge of Black history edit

Surveys of 11th- and 12th-grade students and adults in 2005 show that American schools have given students an awareness of some famous figures in Black history. Both groups were asked to name 10 famous Americans, excluding presidents. Of those named, the three most mentioned were Black: 67% named Martin Luther King Jr., 60% Rosa Parks, and 44% Harriet Tubman. Among adults, King was second (at 36%) and Parks was tied for fourth with 30%, while Tubman tied for 10th place with Henry Ford, at 16%. When distinguished historians were asked in 2006 to name the most prominent Americans, Parks and Tubman did not make the top 100.[233]

Scholars of African American history edit

See also edit

Regional histories edit

Civil rights movement edit

By state:

In other regions:

Notes edit

  1. ^ Kauffman, Miranda (2018). Black Tudors" The Untold Story. Oneworld Publications.
  2. ^ Gates, Henry Louis (2014). "How Many Slaves Landed in the US?". The Root. Retrieved July 8, 2018. Incredibly, most of the 42 million members of the African-American community descend from this tiny group of less than half a million Africans.
  3. ^ "America's Black Holocaust Museum | How Many Africans Were Really Taken to the U.S During the Slave Trade?". abhmuseum.org. 6 January 2014. Retrieved 2018-09-05.
  4. ^ Schneider, Dorothy; Schneider, Carl J. (2007). Slavery in America. Infobase Publishing. p. 554. ISBN 978-1438108131.
  5. ^ a b Kolchin, Peter (2003). American Slavery, 1619–1877 (2nd ed.). New York: Hill and Wang. ISBN 978-0809016303.
  6. ^ Bibko, Julia (2016). "The American Revolution and the Black Loyalist Exodus". History: A Journal of Student Research. 1 (1).
  7. ^ Foner, Eric (2010). The Fiery Trial: Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. p. 14. ISBN 978-0195137552.
  8. ^ William J. Cooper, Jr. and Thomas E. Terrill (2008). The American South: A History. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 363. ISBN 9780742563995.
  9. ^ Leonard L. Richards, Slave Power: The Free North and Southern Domination, 1780–1860 (2000) p. 3)
  10. ^ Bordewich, Fergus M. (2005). Bound for Canaan: The Underground Railroad and the War for the Soul of America. Harper Collins. ISBN 0060524308.
  11. ^ McPherson, James M. (1988). Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era. Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195038637.
  12. ^ Fremon, David (2000). The Jim Crow Laws and Racism in American History. Enslow. ISBN 0766012972.
  13. ^ Lemann, Nicholas (1991). The Promised Land: The Great Black Migration and How It Changed America. Vintage Press. ISBN 0679733477.
  14. ^ Finkelman, Paul. ed. 2009. Encyclopedia of African American History, 1896 to the Present (5 vol.). Oxford University Press. ASIN 0195167791.
  15. ^ Ellis, Sylvia. Freedom's Pragmatist: Lyndon Johnson and Civil Rights (U Press of Florida, 2013).
  16. ^ "2020 Census Illuminates Racial and Ethnic Composition of the Country".
  17. ^ Solomon, Salem (February 17, 2017). "African Immigrant Population on Rise in US". Voice of America. Retrieved 26 February 2017.
  18. ^ "African Americans - A new direction | Britannica".
  19. ^ Westbury, Susan (1985). "Slaves of Colonial Virginia: Where They Came From". The William and Mary Quarterly. 42 (2): 228–237. doi:10.2307/1920429. ISSN 0043-5597. JSTOR 1920429.
  20. ^ a b c d e f Carson, Clayborne, Emma Lapsansky-Werner, and Gary Nash. The Struggle for Freedom: A History of African Americans. New York: Pearson Education, Inc., 2011. ISBN 978-0205832422
  21. ^ Perry, James A. . The Black Collegian Online. Archived from the original on March 5, 2007. Retrieved June 4, 2007.
  22. ^ "RACE - The Power of an Illusion . Go Deeper". PBS. 2003. Retrieved 2023-12-27.
  23. ^ Gomez, Zahkeem A: Exchanging Our Country Marks: The Transformation of African Identities in the Colonial and Antebellum South, p. 27. Chapel Hill, 1998.
  24. ^ Gomez, Michael A: Exchanging Our Country Marks: The Transformation of African Identities in the Colonial and Antebellum South, p. 29. Chapel Hill, 1998.
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Further reading edit

 

Reference books edit

  • Brown, Nikki L.M., and Barry M. Stentiford, eds. The Jim Crow Encyclopedia (Greenwood, 2008) online
  • Earle, Jonathan, and Malcolm Swanston. The Routledge Atlas of African American History (2000), excerpt and text search
  • Finkelman, Paul, ed. Encyclopedia of African American History, 1619–1895: From the Colonial Period to the Age of Frederick Douglass (3 vols, 2006)
  • Finkelman, Paul, ed. Encyclopedia of African American History, 1896 to the Present: From the Age of Segregation to the Twenty-first Century (5 vols, 2009), excerpt and text search
  • Hine, Darlene Clark, Rosalyn Terborg-Penn and Elsa Barkley Brown, eds. Black Women in America – An Historical Encyclopedia (2005), excerpt and text search
  • Loewenberg, Bert James and Ruth Bogin. Black Women in Nineteenth-Century American Life: Their Words, Their Thoughts, Their Feelings (Pennsylvania State UP, 1976).
  • Lowery, Charles D., and John F. Marszalek, eds. Encyclopedia of African-American Civil Rights: From Emancipation to the Present (1992), online edition
  • Palmer, Colin A., ed. Encyclopedia Of African American Culture And History: The Black Experience In The Americas (6 vols, 2005)
  • Richardson, Christopher M.; Ralph E. Luker, eds. (2014). Historical Dictionary of the Civil Rights Movement (2nd ed.). Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9780810880375.
  • Salzman, Jack, David Lionel Smith, and Cornel West, eds. Encyclopedia of African-American Culture and History (5 vols, 1996).
  • Smallwood, Arwin D. The Atlas of African-American History and Politics: From the Slave Trade to Modern Times (1997).

Surveys edit

  • Bennett, Lerone, Before the Mayflower: A History of Black America, 1619–1962 (2018), classic survey; ASIN B08SCBR8WY
  • Franklin, John Hope, and Alfred Moss, From Slavery to Freedom. A History of African Americans (2001), standard textbook; first edition in 1947 excerpt and text search
  • Harris, William H. The Harder We Run: Black Workers Since the Civil War (1982). online edition
  • Hine, Darlene Clark, et al. The African-American Odyssey (2 vols, 4th edn 2007), textbook excerpt and text search vol 1
  • Holt, Thomas C., ed. Major Problems in African-American History: From Freedom to "Freedom Now," 1865–1990s (2000), reader in primary and secondary sources
  • Holt, Thomas C. Children of Fire: A History of African Americans (Hill & Wang; 2010), 438 pp.
  • Kelley, Robin D. G., and Earl Lewis, eds. To Make Our World Anew: A History of African Americans (2000). 672pp; 10 long essays by leading scholars online edition
  • Kendi, Ibram X. and Keisha N. Blain, eds. Four Hundred Souls: A Community History of African America, 1619–2019 (One World, 2021). 528pp; anthology of 80 essays
  • Litwack, Leon, and August Meier. Black Leaders of the 19th Century. (1988)
    • Franklin, John Hope, and August Meier, eds. Black Leaders of the Twentieth Century. (1982), short biographies by scholars.
  • Mandle, Jay R. Not Slave, Not Free: The African American Economic Experience since the Civil War (1992),
  • Nash, Gary B. "The African Americans’ Revolution" in The Oxford Handbook of the American Revolution ed. by Jane Kamensky and Edward G. Gray (2012) online at DOI: 10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199746705.013.0015
  • Painter, Nell Irvin. Creating Black Americans: African American History and Its Meanings, 1619 to the Present (2006), 480 pp.
  • Pinn, Anthony B. The African American Religious Experience in America (2007) excerpt and text search
  • Tuck, Stephen. We Ain't What We Ought To Be: The Black Freedom Struggle from Emancipation to Obama (2011).
  • Weiner, Mark S. Black Trials: Citizenship from the Beginnings of Slavery to the End of Caste (2004).

Since 1914 edit

  • Allen, Walter R., et al. "From Bakke to Fisher: African American Students in US Higher Education over Forty Years." RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences 4.6 (2018): 41–72 online.
  • Breen, William J. “Black Women and the Great War: Mobilization and Reform in the South.” Journal of Southern History 44#3 (1978), pp. 421–440. online, World War I
  • Finley, Randy. "Black Arkansans and World War One." Arkansas Historical Quarterly 49#3 (1990): 249–77. doi:10.2307/40030800.
  • Graham, Hugh Davis. The Civil Rights Era: Origins and Development of National Policy, 1960–1972 (1990)
  • Hemmingway, Theodore. “Prelude to Change: Black Carolinians in the War Years, 1914–1920.” Journal of Negro History 65#3 (1980), pp. 212–227. online
  • Patler, Nicholas. Jim Crow and the Wilson administration: protesting federal segregation in the early twentieth century (2007).
  • Patterson, James T. Grand Expectations: The United States, 1945–1974 (Oxford History of the United States) (1997)
  • Patterson, James T. Restless Giant: The United States from Watergate to Bush v. Gore (Oxford History of the United States) (2007)
  • Scheiber, Jane Lang, and Harry N. Scheiber. "The Wilson administration and the wartime mobilization of black Americans, 1917–18." Labor History 10.3 (1969): 433–458.
  • Wynn, Neil A. African American Experience During World War II (2011)
  • Yellin, Eric S. (2013). Racism in the Nation's Service. doi:10.5149/9781469607214_Yellin. ISBN 9781469607207. S2CID 153118305.

Activism and urban culture edit

  • Bernstein, Shana. Bridges of Reform: Interracial Civil Rights Activism in Twentieth-Century Los Angeles (Oxford University Press, 2010)
  • Black Jr., Timuel D. Bridges of Memory; Chicago's First Wave of Black Migration: An Oral History, (2005). ISBN 081012315-0
  • Boyd, Herb, ed. The Harlem Reader: A Celebration of New York's Most Famous Neighborhood, from the Renaissance Years to the 21st Century (2003), primary sources
  • Branch, Taylor. Parting the Waters: America in the King Years, 1954–1963 (1988); Pillar of Fire: America in the King Years, 1963–1965 (1998); At Canaan's Edge: America in the King Years, 1965–1968 (2006)
  • Carle, Susan D. Defining the Struggle: National Racial Justice Organizing, 1880–1915 (Oxford University Press, 2013)
  • Cash, Floris Loretta Barnett. African American Women and Social Action: The Clubwomen and Volunteerism from Jim Crow to the New Deal, 1896–1936 (Praeger, 2001)
  • Garrow, David. Bearing the Cross: Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (1999)
  • Gasman, Marybeth and Roger L. Geiger. Higher Education for African Americans before the Civil Rights Era, 1900–1964 (2012)
  • Grossman, James R. Land of Hope: Chicago, Black Southerners, and the Great Migration (1991)
  • Hornsby, Alton. Black Power in Dixie: A Political History of African Americans in Atlanta (2009)
  • Hunt, Darnell, and Ana-Christina Ramon, eds. Black Los Angeles: American Dreams and Racial Realities (2010)
  • Kusmer, Kenneth L. and Joe W. Trotter, eds. African-American Urban History since World War II (2009)
  • Moore, Shirley Ann Wilson. To Place Our Deeds: The African American Community in Richmond, California, 19101963 (2000)
  • Osofsky, Gilbert. Harlem: The Making of a Ghetto: Negro New York, 1890–1930 (1966)
  • Orser, W. Edward. "Secondhand Suburbs: Black Pioneers in Baltimore's Edmondson Village, 1955–1980." Journal of Urban History 10, no. 3 (May 1990): 227–62.
  • Pattillo-McCoy, Mary. Black Pickett Fences: Privilege and Peril among the Black Middle Class (1999)
  • Player, Tiffany Angel. The Anti-lynching Crusaders: A Study of Black Women's Activism (PhD dissertation, University of Georgia, 2008) online
  • Rabaka, Reiland. Hip Hop's Amnesia: From Blues and the Black Women's Club Movement to Rap and the Hip Hop Movement (Lexington Books, 2012)
  • Self, Robert O. American Babylon: Race and the Struggle for Postwar Oakland (2003)
  • Spear, Allan H. Black Chicago: The Making of a Negro Ghetto, 1890–1920 (1969)
  • Sugrue, Thomas J. Sweet Land of Liberty: The Forgotten Struggle for Civil Rights in the North (2008)- 720pp comprehensive history of civil rights issue in the North, 1930s–2000s online
  • Sugrue, Thomas J. The Origins of the Urban Crisis: Race and Inequality in Postwar Detroit (1996) online
  • Thomas, Richard Walter. Life for Us Is What We Make It: Building Black Community in Detroit, 1915–1945 (1992)
  • Washburn, Patrick S. The African American Newspaper: Voice of Freedom (Northwestern University Press, 2006)
  • Wiese, Andrew. Places of Their Own: African American Suburbanization in the Twentieth Century (2004).
  • Wiese, Andrew. "Black Housing, White Finance: African American Housing and Home Ownership in Evanston, Illinois, before 1940." Journal of Social History 33, no. 2 (Winter 1999): 429–60.
  • Wiese, Andrew. "Places of Our Own: Suburban Black Towns before 1960." Journal of Urban History 19, no. 3 (1993): 30–54.
  • Williams, Doretha. "Kansas Grows the Best Wheat and the Best Race Women: Black Women's Club Movement in Kansas 1900–30." (2011) online.
  • Wilson, William H. Hamilton Park: A Planned Black Community in Dallas (1998)

Historiography and teaching edit

  • Arnesen, Eric. "Up From Exclusion: Black and White Workers, Race, and the State of Labor History," Reviews in American History 26(1) March 1998, pp. 146–174 in Project MUSE
  • Dagbovie, Pero Gaglo. African American History Reconsidered (2010); 255 pages; excerpt and text search
    • Dagbovie, Pero. The Early Black History Movement, Carter G. Woodson, and Lorenzo Johnston Greene (2007) excerpt and text search
    • Dagbovie, Pero Gaglo. "Exploring a Century of Historical Scholarship on Booker T. Washington." Journal of African American History 2007 92(2): 239–264. ISSN 1548-1867 Fulltext: Ebsco
  • Dorsey, Allison. "Black History Is American History: Teaching African American History in the Twenty-first Century." Journal of American History 2007 93(4): 1171–1177. ISSN 0021-8723 Fulltext: History Cooperative
  • Ernest, John. "Liberation Historiography: African-American Historians before the Civil War," American Literary History 14(3), Fall 2002, pp. 413–443 in Project MUSE
  • Eyerman, Ron. Cultural Trauma: Slavery and the Formation of African American Identity (2002) argues that slavery emerged as a central element of the collective identity of African Americans in the post-Reconstruction era.
  • Fields, Barbara J. "Ideology and Race in American History," in J. Morgan Kousser and James M. McPherson, eds, Region, Race, and Reconstruction: Essays in Honor of C. Vann Woodward (1982),
  • Franklin, John Hope. "Afro-American History: State of the Art," Journal of American History (June 1988): 163–173. in JSTOR
  • Goggin, Jacqueline. Carter G. Woodson: A Life in Black History (1993)
  • Hall, Stephen Gilroy. "'To Give a Faithful Account of the Race': History and Historical Consciousness in the African-American Community, 1827–1915." PhD dissertation, Ohio State University, 1999. 470 pp. DAI 2000 60(8): 3084-A. DA9941339 Fulltext: ProQuest Dissertations & Theses
  • Harris, Robert L (1982). (PDF). Journal of Negro History. 57 (2): 107–121. doi:10.2307/2717569. JSTOR 2717569. S2CID 149836969. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-12-21. Retrieved 2017-06-01.
  • Harris, Robert L., Jr. "The Flowering of Afro-American History." American Historical Review 1987 92(5): 1150–1161. ISSN 0002-8762 in Jstor
  • Higginbotham, Evelyn Brooks (1992). "African-American Women's History and the Metalanguage of Race". Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society. 17 (2): 251–274. doi:10.1086/494730. S2CID 144201941.
  • Hine, Darlene Clark (2007). "African American Women and Their Communities in the Twentieth Century: The Foundation and Future of Black Women's Studies". Black Women, Gender & Families. 1 (1): 1–23. JSTOR 10.5406/blacwomegendfami.1.1.0001.
  • Hine, Darlene Clark, ed. Afro-American History: Past, Present, and Future (1980).
  • Hine, Darlene Clark. Hine Sight: Black Women and the Re-Construction of American History (1999), excerpt and text search
  • Hornsby Jr., Alton, et al. eds. A Companion to African American History (2005). 580 pp. 31 long essays by experts covering African and diasporic connections in the context of the transatlantic slave trade; colonial and antebellum African, European, and indigenous relations; processes of cultural exchange; war and emancipation; post-emancipation community and institution building; intersections of class and gender; migration; and struggles for civil rights. ISBN 0631230661
  • McMillen, Neil R. "Up from Jim Crow: Black History Enters the Profession's Mainstream." Reviews in American History 1987 15(4): 543–549. ISSN 0048-7511, in Jstor
  • Meier, August, and Elliott Rudwick. Black History and the Historical Profession, 1915–1980 (1986)
  • Nelson, Hasker. Listening For Our Past: A Lay Guide To African American Oral History Interviewing (2000), excerpt and text search
  • Quarles, Benjamin. Black Mosaic: Essays in Afro-American History and Historiography (1988).
  • Rabinowitz, Howard N. "More Than the Woodward Thesis: Assessing The Strange Career of Jim Crow", Journal of American History 75 (December 1988): 842–56. in JSTOR
  • Reidy, Joseph P. "Slave Emancipation Through the Prism of Archives Records" (1997), online
  • Roper, John Herbert. U. B. Phillips: A Southern Mind (1984), on the white historian of slavery
  • Strickland, Arvarh E., and Robert E. Weems, eds. The African American Experience: An Historiographical and Bibliographical Guide (Greenwood, 2001). 442pp; 17 topical chapters by experts.
  • Trotter, Joe W. "African-American History: Origins, Development, and Current State of the Field," OAH Magazine of History 7(4), Summer 1993,
  • Wright, William D. Black History and Black Identity: A Call for a New Historiography (2002), proposes new racial and ethnic terminology and classifications for the study of black people and history.excerpt and text search
  • Yacovone, Donald (April 8, 2018). "Textbook Racism. How scholars sustained white supremacy". Chronicle of Higher Education. Retrieved April 18, 2018.

Primary sources edit

  • Aptheker, Herbert, ed. A Documentary History of the Negro People in the United States. (7 vols, 1951–1994)
  • Baker, Ray Stannard. Following the Color Line: An Account of Negro Citizenship in the American Democracy (1908) online.
  • Berlin, Ira, ed. Free at Last: A Documentary History of Slavery, Freedom, and the Civil War (1995)
  • Bracey, John H., and Manisha Sinha, eds. African American Mosaic: A Documentary History from the Slave Trade to the Twenty-First Century, (2 vols, 2004)
  • Bureau of Education, Department of the Interior. Negro Education: A Study of the Private and Higher Schools for Colored People in the United States, Volume II. (Bulletin, 1916, No. 39) (1917) online
  • Chafe, William Henry, Raymond Gavins, and Robert Korstad, eds. Remembering Jim Crow: African Americans Tell About Life in the Segregated South (2003) excerpt and text search
  • Finkenbine, Roy E. Sources of the African-American Past: Primary Sources in American History (2nd edn 2003)
  • Hampton, Henry, and Steve Fayer, eds. Voices of Freedom (1990), oral histories of civil rights movement
  • Hart, Albert Bushnell (1910). The Southern South. D. Appleton. ISBN 9780837118901. by a white Harvard professor; focus on race relations
  • King Jr., Martin Luther. I Have a Dream: Writings and Speeches That Changed the World (1992), excerpt and text search
  • King Jr., Martin Luther. Why We Can't Wait (1963/1964; 2000)
  • King Jr., Martin Luther. The Papers of Martin Luther King, Jr.: Volume VI: Advocate of the Social Gospel, September 1948–March 1963 (2007) excerpt and text search
  • Levy, Peter B. Let Freedom Ring: A Documentary History of the Modern Civil Rights Movement (1992), online edition
  • Rawick, George P. ed. The American Slave: A Composite Autobiography (19 vols, 1972), oral histories with ex-slaves conducted in the 1930s by Works Progress Administration
  • Sernett, Milton C. African American Religious History: A Documentary Witness (1999) excerpt and text search
  • Wright, Kai, ed. The African-American Archive: The History of the Black Experience Through Documents (2001)

External links edit

  • – African-American History Channel
  • "Africans in America" – PBS 4-Part Series (2007)
  • Living Black History: How Reimagining the African-American Past Can Remake America's Racial Future by Manning Marable (2006)
  • Library of Congress – African American History and Culture
  • Library of Congress – African American Odyssey
  • Center for Contemporary Black History at Columbia University
  • Encyclopædia Britannica – Guide to Black History
  • Comparative status of African-Americans in Canada in the 1800s
  • Photographs of African-American life and racial attitudes, 1850–1940, from the collection of the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Yale University
  • Black History Milestones
  • "African American Place of Origin Genealogy – FamilySearch Wiki". Familysearch.org. Retrieved October 25, 2017.
  • Pioneering African American oral history video excerpts at The National Visionary Leadership Project

african, american, history, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources African American history news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message African American history started with the arrival of Africans to North America in the 16th and 17th centuries Former Spanish slaves who had been freed by Francis Drake arrived aboard the Golden Hind at New Albion in California in 1579 1 The European colonization of the Americas and the resulting Atlantic slave trade led to a large scale transportation of enslaved Africans across the Atlantic of the roughly 10 12 million Africans who were sold by the Barbary slave trade either to European slavery or to servitude in the Americas approximately 388 000 landed in North America 2 3 After arriving in various European colonies in North America the enslaved Africans were sold to white colonists primarily to work on cash crop plantations A group of enslaved Africans arrived in the English Virginia Colony in 1619 marking the beginning of slavery in the colonial history of the United States by 1776 roughly 20 of the British North American population was of African descent both free and enslaved 4 5 Left right from top 1840 depiction of field hands and child 1857 newspaper ads for runaway slave rewards Harriet Tubman aftermath of 1921 Tulsa race massacre 1963 March on Washington civil rights leaders MLK Jr amp Malcolm X young boy touching President Obama s hair 2020 George Floyd protests The American Revolutionary War which saw the Thirteen Colonies become independent and transform into the United States led to great social upheavals for African Americans Black soldiers fought on both the British and the American sides and after the conflict ended the Northern United States gradually abolished slavery 6 7 However the American South which had an economy dependent on plantations operation by slave labor entrenched the slave system and expanded it during the westward expansion of the United States 8 9 During this period numerous enslaved African Americans escaped into free states and Canada via the Underground Railroad 10 Disputes over slavery between the Northern and Southern states led to the American Civil War in which 178 000 African Americans served on the Union side During the war President Abraham Lincoln issued the Thirteenth Amendment which abolished slavery in the U S except as punishment for a crime 11 After the war ended with a Confederate defeat the Reconstruction era began in which African Americans living in the South were granted equal rights with their white neighbors White opposition to these advancements led to most African Americans living in the South to be disfranchised and a system of racial segregation known as the Jim Crow laws was passed in the Southern states 12 Beginning in the early 20th century in response to poor economic conditions segregation and lynchings over 6 million primarily rural African Americans migrated out of the South to other regions of the United States in search of opportunity 13 The nadir of American race relations led to civil rights efforts to overturn discrimination and racism against African Americans 14 In 1954 these efforts coalesced into a broad unified movement led by civil rights activists such as Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King Jr This succeeded in persuading the federal government to pass the Civil Rights Act of 1964 which outlawed racial discrimination 15 The 2020 United States census reported that 46 936 733 respondents identified as African Americans forming roughly 14 2 of the American population 16 Of those over 2 1 million immigrated to the United States as citizens of modern African states 17 African Americans have made major contributions to the culture of the United States including literature cinema and music 18 Contents 1 Enslavement 1 1 African origins 1 1 1 Regions of Africa 1 2 The Middle Passage 1 3 Transport 2 Colonial era 2 1 Black population in the 1700s 3 American Revolution and early United States 3 1 American independence 4 Religion 5 Antebellum period 5 1 Abolitionism 5 2 The Black community 5 3 Haiti s effect on slavery 5 4 Dred Scott v Sandford 6 American Civil War and emancipation 7 Reconstruction 8 Nadir of American race relations 8 1 Racial terrorism 9 Early civil rights movement 10 Great Migration and the Harlem Renaissance 11 Black owned businesses 11 1 Women in the beauty business 12 World War I 12 1 Soldiers 12 2 Home front and postwar 13 New Deal 13 1 Cotton 14 World War II 14 1 A call for The Double Victory 14 2 Wartime service 14 3 Home front 14 4 Hollywood 15 Second Great Migration 16 Civil rights era 17 Post civil rights era 17 1 Social issues 18 Historiography 18 1 Knowledge of Black history 18 2 Scholars of African American history 19 See also 19 1 Regional histories 19 2 Civil rights movement 20 Notes 21 Further reading 21 1 Reference books 21 2 Surveys 21 3 Since 1914 21 4 Activism and urban culture 21 5 Historiography and teaching 21 6 Primary sources 22 External linksEnslavement editMain article Slavery in the colonial history of the United States nbsp African American slaves in GeorgiaAfrican origins edit African Americans are the descendants of Africans who were forced into slavery after they were captured during African wars or raids They were captured and brought to America as part of the Atlantic slave trade 19 African Americans are descended from various ethnic groups mostly from ethnic groups that lived in West and Central Africa including the Sahel A smaller number of African Americans are descended from ethnic groups that lived in Eastern and Southeastern Africa The major ethnic groups that the enslaved Africans belonged to included the Bakongo Igbo Mandinka Wolof Akan Fon Yoruba and Makua among many others Although these different groups varied in customs religious theology and language what they had in common was a way of life which was different from that of the Europeans 20 Originally a majority of the future slaves came from these villages and societies however once they were sent to the Americas and enslaved these different peoples had European standards and beliefs forced upon them causing them to do away with tribal differences and forge a new history and culture that was a creolization of their common past present and European culture 21 Slaves who belonged to specific African ethnic groups were more sought after and became more dominant in numbers than slaves who belonged to other African ethnic groups in certain regions of what later became the United States 22 Regions of Africa edit Studies of contemporary documents reveal seven regions from which Africans were sold or taken during the Atlantic slave trade These regions were Senegambia present day Senegal and The Gambia encompassing the coast from the Senegal River to the Casamance River where captives as far away as the Upper and Middle Niger River Valley were sold The Sierra Leone region included territory from the Casamance to the Assinie in the modern countries of Guinea Bissau Guinea Sierra Leone Liberia and Cote d Ivoire The Gold Coast region consisted of mainly modern Ghana The Bight of Benin region stretched from the Volta River to the Benue River in modern Togo Benin and southwestern Nigeria The Bight of Biafra extended from southeastern Nigeria through Cameroon into Gabon West Central Africa the largest region included the Congo and Angola and East and Southeast Africa the region of Mozambique Madagascar included the modern countries of Mozambique parts of Tanzania and Madagascar 23 The largest source of slaves transported across the Atlantic Ocean for the New World was West Africa Some West Africans were skilled iron workers and were therefore able to make tools that aided in their agricultural labor While there were many unique tribes with their own customs and religions by the 10th century many of the tribes had embraced Islam Those villages in West Africa which were lucky enough to be in good conditions for growth and success prospered They also contributed their success to the slave trade 20 In all about 10 12 million Africans were transported to the Western Hemisphere The vast majority of these people came from that stretch of the West African coast extending from present day Senegal to Angola a small percentage came from Madagascar and East Africa Only 5 about 500 000 went to the American colonies The vast majority went to the West Indies and Brazil where they died quickly Demographic conditions were highly favorable in the American colonies with less disease more food some medical care and lighter work loads than prevailed in the sugar fields 5 Origins and percentages of African Americans imported to the Thirteen Colonies New France and New Spain 1700 1820 24 Region PercentageWest Central Africa 26 1 Bight of Biafra 24 4 Sierra Leone 15 8 Senegambia 14 5 Gold Coast 13 1 Bight of Benin 4 3 Mozambique Madagascar 1 8 Total 100 0 The Middle Passage edit Main article Middle Passage Before the Atlantic slave trade there were already people of African descent in America A few countries in Africa would buy sell and trade other enslaved Africans who were often prisoners of war with the Europeans The people of Mali and Benin are known for partaking in the event of selling their prisoners of war and other unwanted people off as slaves 20 Transport edit In the account of Olaudah Equiano he described the process of being transported to the colonies and being on the slave ships as a horrific experience On the ships the enslaved Africans were separated from their family long before they boarded the ships 25 Once aboard the ships the captives were then segregated by gender 25 Under the deck the enslaved Africans were cramped and did not have enough space to walk around freely Enslaved males were generally kept in the ship s hold where they experienced the worst of crowding 25 The captives stationed on the floor beneath low lying bunks could barely move and spent much of the voyage pinned to the floorboards which could over time wear the skin on their elbows down to the bone 25 Due to the lack of basic hygiene malnourishment and dehydration diseases spread wildly and death was common The women on the ships often endured rape by the crewmen 20 Women and children were often kept in rooms set apart from the main hold This gave crewmen easy access to the women which was often regarded as one of the perks of the trade system 25 Not only did these rooms give the crewmen easy access to women but it gave enslaved women better access to information on the ship s crew fortifications and daily routine but little opportunity to communicate this to the men confined in the ship s hold 25 As an example women instigated a 1797 insurrection aboard the slave ship Thomas by stealing weapons and passing them to the men below as well as engaging in hand to hand combat with the ship s crew 25 In the midst of these terrible conditions enslaved Africans plotted mutiny Enslaved males were the most likely candidates to mutiny and only at times they were on deck 25 While rebellions did not happen often they were usually unsuccessful In order for the crew members to keep the enslaved Africans under control and prevent future rebellions the crews were often twice as large and members would instill fear into the enslaved Africans through brutality and harsh punishments 25 From the time of being captured in Africa to the arrival to the plantations of the European masters took an average of six months 20 Africans were completely cut off from their families home and community life 26 They were forced to adjust to a new way of life Colonial era editThis article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources African American history news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Landing Negroes at Jamestown from Dutch man of war 1619 1901 nbsp Slaves working in 17th century Virginia by an unknown artist 1670 Africans assisted the Spanish and the Portuguese during their early exploration of the Americas In the 16th century some Black explorers settled in the Mississippi valley and in the areas that became South Carolina and New Mexico The most celebrated Black explorer of the Americas was Esteban who traveled through the Southwest in the 1530s 27 In 1619 the first captive Africans were brought via Dutch slave ship to Point Comfort today Fort Monroe in Hampton Virginia thirty miles downstream from Jamestown Virginia 28 They had been kidnapped by Portuguese slave traders 29 Virginia settlers treated these captives as indentured servants and released them after a number of years This practice was gradually replaced by the system of chattel slavery used in the Caribbean 30 When servants were freed they became competition for resources Additionally released servants had to be replaced 31 This combined with the ambiguous nature of the social status of Black people and the difficulty in using any other group of people as forced servants led to the subjugation of Black people into slavery Massachusetts was the first colony to legalize slavery in 1641 32 Other colonies followed suit by passing laws that made slave status heritable and non Christian imported servants slaves for life 31 At first Africans in the South were outnumbered by white indentured servants who came voluntarily from Europe They who avoided the plantations With the vast amount of arable land and a shortage of laborers plantation owners turned to African slavery The enslaved had some legal rights it was a crime to kill an enslaved person for example and several whites were hanged for it citation needed Generally enslaved Africans developed their own family system religion and customs in the slave quarters with little interference from owners who were only interested in work outputs citation needed Before the 1660s the North American mainland colonies were still fairly small in size and did not have a great demand for labour so colonists did not import large numbers of enslaved Africans at this point citation needed Black population in the 1700s edit By 1700 there were 25 000 enslaved Black people in the North American mainland colonies forming roughly 10 of the population Some enslaved Black people had been directly shipped from Africa most of them were from 1518 to the 1850s but initially in the very early stages of the European colonization of North America occasionally they had been shipped via the West Indies in small cargoes after spending time working on the islands 33 At the same time many were born to Africans and their descendants and thus were native born on the North American mainland Their legal status was now clear enslaved for life with Black children inheriting the same status 34 As European colonists engaged in aggressive expansionism claiming and clearing more land for large scale farming and the construction of plantations the flow of enslaved Africans brought to the continent rapidly increased beginning in the 1660s 35 The slave trade from the West Indies proved insufficient to meet demand in the now fast growing North American slave market Additionally most North American buyers of enslaved people no longer wanted to purchase enslaved people who were coming in from the West Indies by now they were either harder to obtain too expensive undesirable or more often they had been exhausted in many ways by the brutality of the islands sugar plantations 36 From the 1680s onward the majority of enslaved Africans imported into North America were shipped directly from Africa and most of them disembarked in ports located in what is now the Southern U S particularly in the present day states of Virginia South Carolina Georgia and Louisiana By the turn of the 18th century enslaved Africans had come to fully supplant indentured servants in proving the labor source for the rapidly expanding plantation system of the Southern Colonies 37 The population of enslaved African Americans in North American grew rapidly during the 18th and early 19th centuries due to a variety of factors including a lower prevalence of tropic diseases 38 Colonial society was divided over the religious and moral implications of slavery though it remained legal in each of the Thirteen Colonies until the American Revolution Slavery led to a gradual shift between the American South and North both before and after independence as the comparatively more urbanized and industrialized North required fewer slaves than the South 39 By the 1750s the native born enslaved population of African descent outnumbered that of the African born enslaved citation needed By the time of the American Revolution several Northern states were considering the abolition of slavery citation needed Some Southern colonies such as Virginia had produced such large and self sustaining native born enslaved Black populations that they stopped taking indirect imports of enslaved Africans altogether citation needed However other colonies such as Georgia and South Carolina still relied on a steady influx of enslaved people to keep up with the ever growing demand for agricultural labor among the burgeoning plantation economies These colonies continued to import enslaved Africans until the trade was outlawed in 1808 save for a temporary lull during the Revolutionary War South Carolina s Black population remained very high for most of the eighteenth century due to the continued import of enslaved Africans with Blacks outnumbering whites three to one citation needed In contrast Virginia maintained a white majority despite its significant Black enslaved population 40 It was said that in the eighteenth century the colony South Carolina resembled an extension of West Africa citation needed Legal importation of enslaved Africans halted in 1808 when the newly formed United States outlawed the slave trade on the earliest date allowed by the Constitution Despite the ban small to moderate cargoes of enslaved Africans continued to be illegally brought into the U S only ending for good in 1859 41 Gradually a free Black population emerged concentrated in port cities along the Atlantic coast from Charleston to Boston citation needed Enslaved people who lived in the cities and towns had more privileges than enslaved people who did not but the great majority of enslaved people lived on southern tobacco or rice plantations usually in groups of 20 or more 42 Wealthy plantation owners eventually became so reliant on slavery that they devastated their own lower class 43 In the years to come the institution of slavery would be so heavily involved in the South s economy that it would divide America The most serious slave rebellion was the 1739 Stono Uprising in South Carolina The colony had about 56 000 enslaved Blacks outnumbering whites two to one About 150 enslaved people rose up seizing guns ammunition and killing twenty whites before fleeing to Spanish Florida The local militia soon intercepted and killed most of the slaves involved in the uprising 44 At this time when slavery existed in all American colonies In the North 2 of people owned enslaved people most of whom were personal servants In the south 25 of the population relied on the labour of enslaved people in what fashion who plantation owners or small time farmers Southern slavery usually took the form of field hands who lived and worked on plantations 45 These statistics show the early imbalance that would eventually tip the scale and rid the United States of slavery clarification needed 46 American Revolution and early United States editSee also American Revolution History of the United States 1776 1789 and African Americans in the Revolutionary War The latter half of the 18th century was a time of significant political upheaval on the North American continent In the midst of cries for independence from British rule many pointed out the hypocrisy inherent in colonial slaveholders demands for freedom The Declaration of Independence a document which would become a manifesto for human rights and personal freedom around the world was written by Thomas Jefferson a man who owned over 200 enslaved people Other Southern statesmen were also major slaveholders The Second Continental Congress considered freeing enslaved people to assist with the war effort but they also removed language from the Declaration of Independence that included the promotion of slavery amongst the offenses of King George III A number of free Black people most notably Prince Hall founder of Prince Hall Freemasonry submitted petitions which called for abolition but these were largely ignored 47 This did not deter Black people free and enslaved from participating in the Revolution Crispus Attucks a free Black tradesman was the first casualty of the Boston Massacre and of the ensuing American Revolutionary War 5 000 Black people including Prince Hall fought in the Continental Army Many fought side by side with White soldiers at the battles of Lexington and Concord and at Bunker Hill However upon George Washington s ascension to commander of the Continental Army in 1775 the additional recruitment of Black people was forbidden citation needed Approximately 5000 free African American men helped the American Colonists in their struggle for freedom One of these men Agrippa Hull fought in the American Revolution for over six years He and the other African American soldiers fought in order to improve their white neighbor s views of them and advance their own fight of freedom 48 By contrast the British and Loyalists offered emancipation to any enslaved person owned by a Patriot who was willing to join the Loyalist forces Lord Dunmore the Governor of Virginia recruited 300 African American men into his Ethiopian regiment within a month of making this proclamation In South Carolina 25 000 enslaved people more than one quarter of the total escaped to join and fight with the British or fled for freedom in the uproar of war citation needed Thousands of slaves also escaped in Georgia and Virginia as well as New England and New York Well known African Americans who fought for the British include Colonel Tye and Boston King citation needed Thomas Peters was one of the large numbers of African Americans who fought for the British Peters was born in present day Nigeria and belonged to the Yoruba tribe and ended up being captured and sold into slavery in French Louisiana 49 Sold again he was enslaved in North Carolina and escaped his master s farm in order to receive Lord Dunmore s promise of freedom Peters had fought for the British throughout the war When the war finally ended he and other African Americans who fought on the losing side were taken to Nova Scotia Here they encountered difficulty farming the small plots of lands they were granted They also did not receive the same privileges and opportunities as the white Loyalists had Peters sailed to London in order to complain to the government He arrived at a momentous time when English abolitionists were pushing a bill through Parliament to charter the Sierra Leone Company and to grant it trading and settlement rights on the West African coast Peters and the other African Americans on Nova Scotia left for Sierra Leone in 1792 Peters died soon after they arrived but the other members of his party lived on in their new home where they formed the Sierra Leone Creole ethnic identity 50 51 52 53 54 American independence edit The colonists eventually won the war and the United States was recognized as a sovereign nation In the provisional treaty they demanded the return of property including enslaved people Nonetheless the British helped up to 3 000 documented African Americans to leave the country for Nova Scotia Jamaica and Britain rather than be returned to slavery 55 The Constitutional Convention of 1787 sought to define the foundation for the government of the newly formed United States of America The constitution set forth the ideals of freedom and equality while providing for the continuation of the institution of slavery through the fugitive slave clause and the three fifths compromise Additionally free Black people s rights were also restricted in many places Most were denied the right to vote and were excluded from public schools Some Black people sought to fight these contradictions in court In 1780 Elizabeth Freeman and Quock Walker used language from the new Massachusetts constitution that declared all men were born free and equal in freedom suits to gain release from slavery A free Black businessman in Boston named Paul Cuffe sought to be excused from paying taxes since he had no voting rights 56 In the Northern states the revolutionary spirit did help African Americans Beginning in the 1750s there was widespread sentiment during the American Revolution that slavery was a social evil for the country as a whole and for the whites that should eventually be abolished citation needed All the Northern states passed emancipation acts between 1780 and 1804 most of these arranged for gradual emancipation and a special status for freedmen so there were still a dozen permanent apprentices into the 19th century In 1787 Congress passed the Northwest Ordinance and barred slavery from the large Northwest Territory 57 In 1790 there were more than 59 000 free Black people in the United States By 1810 that number had risen to 186 446 Most of these were in the North but Revolutionary sentiments also motivated Southern slaveholders For 20 years after the Revolution more Southerners also freed enslaved people sometimes by manumission or in wills to be accomplished after the slaveholder s death In the Upper South the percentage of free Black people rose from about 1 before the Revolution to more than 10 by 1810 Quakers and Moravians worked to persuade slaveholders to free families In Virginia the number of free Black people increased from 10 000 in 1790 to nearly 30 000 in 1810 but 95 of Black people were still enslaved In Delaware three quarters of all Black people were free by 1810 58 By 1860 just over 91 of Delaware s Black people were free and 49 1 of those in Maryland 59 Among the successful free men was Benjamin Banneker a Maryland astronomer mathematician almanac author surveyor and farmer who in 1791 assisted in the initial survey of the boundaries of the future District of Columbia 60 Despite the challenges of living in the new country most free Black people fared far better than the nearly 800 000 enslaved Blacks Even so many considered emigrating to Africa 56 Religion editMain articles Religion of Black Americans and Black church By 1800 a small number of slaves had joined Christian churches Free Black people in the North set up their own networks of churches and in the South the slaves sat in the upper galleries of white churches Central to the growth of community among Blacks was the Black church usually the first communal institution to be established The Black church was both an expression of community and unique African American spirituality and a reaction to discrimination The churches also served as neighborhood centers where free Black people could celebrate their African heritage without intrusion from white detractors The church also served as the center of education Since the church was part of the community and wanted to provide education it educated the freed and enslaved Black people Seeking autonomy some Black people like Richard Allen bishop founded separate Black denominations 61 The Second Great Awakening 1800 1830s has been called the central and defining event in the development of Afro Christianity 62 63 Antebellum period editSee also Antebellum South and African American founding fathers of the United States nbsp A plantation in Louisiana As the United States grew the institution of slavery became more entrenched in the southern states while northern states began to abolish it Pennsylvania was the first in 1780 passing an act for gradual abolition 64 A number of events continued to shape views on slavery One of these events was the Haitian Revolution which was the only slave revolt that led to an independent country Many slave owners fled to the United States with tales of horror and massacre that alarmed Southern whites 65 The invention of the cotton gin in the 1790s allowed the cultivation of short staple cotton which could be grown in much of the Deep South where warm weather and proper soil conditions prevailed The industrial revolution in Europe and New England generated a heavy demand for cotton for cheap clothing which caused an enormous demand for slave labor to develop new cotton plantations There was a 70 increase in the number of slaves in the United States in only 20 years They were overwhelmingly concentrated on plantations in the Deep South and moved west as old cotton fields lost their productivity and new lands were purchased Unlike the Northern States who put more focus into manufacturing and commerce the South was heavily dependent on agriculture 66 Southern political economists at this time supported the institution by concluding that nothing was inherently contradictory about owning slaves and that a future of slavery existed even if the South were to industrialize 67 Racial economic and political turmoil reached an all time high regarding slavery up to the events of the Civil War In 1807 at the urging of President Thomas Jefferson Congress abolished the importation of enslaved workers While American Black people celebrated this as a victory in the fight against slavery the ban increased the internal trade in enslaved people Changing agricultural practices in the Upper South from tobacco to mixed farming decreased labor requirements and enslaved people were sold to traders for the developing Deep South In addition the Fugitive Slave Act of 1793 allowed any Black person to be claimed as a runaway unless a White person testified on their behalf A number of free Black people especially indentured children were kidnapped and sold into slavery with little or no hope of rescue By 1819 there were exactly 11 free and 11 slave states which increased sectionalism Fears of an imbalance in Congress led to the 1820 Missouri Compromise that required states to be admitted to the union in pairs one slave and one free 68 In 1850 after winning the Mexican American War a problem gripped the nation what to do about the territories won from Mexico Henry Clay the man behind the compromise of 1820 once more rose to the challenge to craft the compromise of 1850 In this compromise the territories of New Mexico Arizona Utah and Nevada would be organized but the issue of slavery would be decided later Washington D C would abolish the slave trade but not slavery itself California would be admitted as a free state but the South would receive a new fugitive slave act which required Northerners to return enslaved people who escaped to the North to their owners The compromise of 1850 would maintain a shaky peace until the election of Lincoln in 1860 69 In 1851 the battle between enslaved people and slave owners was met in Lancaster County Pennsylvania The Christiana Riot demonstrated the growing conflict between states rights and Congress on the issue of slavery 70 Abolitionism edit See also Abolitionism in the United Kingdom and Abolitionism in the United States Abolitionists in Britain and the United States in the 1840 1860 period developed large complex campaigns against slavery According to Patrick C Kennicott the largest and most effective abolitionist speakers were Black people who spoke before the countless local meetings of the National Negro Conventions They used the traditional arguments against slavery protesting it on moral economic and political grounds Their role in the antislavery movement not only aided the abolitionist cause but also was a source of pride to the Black community 71 In 1852 Harriet Beecher Stowe published a novel that changed how many would view slavery Uncle Tom s Cabin tells the story of the life of an enslaved person and the brutality that is faced by that life day after day It would sell over 100 000 copies in its first year The popularity of Uncle Tom s Cabin would solidify the North in its opposition to slavery and press forward the abolitionist movement President Lincoln would later invite Stowe to the White House in honor of this book that changed America In 1856 Charles Sumner a Massachusetts congressmen and antislavery leader was assaulted and nearly killed on the House floor by Preston Brooks of South Carolina Sumner had been delivering an abolitionist speech to Congress when Brooks attacked him Brooks received praise in the South for his actions while Sumner became a political icon in the North Sumner later returned to the Senate where he was a leader of the Radical Republicans in ending slavery and legislating equal rights for freed slaves 72 Over 1 million enslaved people were moved from the older seaboard slave states with their declining economies to the rich cotton states of the southwest many others were sold and moved locally 73 Ira Berlin 2000 argues that this Second Middle Passage shredded the planters paternalist pretenses in the eyes of Black people and prodded enslaved people and free Black people to create a host of oppositional ideologies and institutions that better accounted for the realities of endless deportations expulsions and flights that continually remade their world 74 Benjamin Quarles work Black Abolitionists provides the most extensive account of the role of Black abolitionists in the American anti slavery movement 75 The Black community edit 76 Black people generally settled in cities creating the core of Black community life in the region They established churches and fraternal orders Many of these early efforts were weak and they often failed but they represented the initial steps in the evolution of Black communities 77 During the early Antebellum period the creation of free Black communities began to expand laying out a foundation for African Americans future At first only a few thousand African Americans had their freedom As the years went by the number of Blacks being freed expanded tremendously building to 233 000 by the 1820s They sometimes sued to gain their freedom or purchased it Some slave owners freed their bondspeople and a few state legislatures abolished slavery 78 African Americans tried to take the advantage of establishing homes and jobs in the cities During the early 1800s free Black people took several steps to establish fulfilling work lives in urban areas 79 The rise of industrialization which depended on power driven machinery more than human labor might have afforded them employment but many owners of textile mills refused to hire Black workers These owners considered whites to be more reliable and educable This resulted in many Black people performing unskilled labor Black men worked as stevedores construction worker and as cellar well and grave diggers As for Black women workers they worked as servants for white families Some women were also cooks seamstresses basket makers midwives teachers and nurses 78 Black women worked as washerwomen or domestic servants for the white families Some cities had independent Black seamstresses cooks basketmakers confectioners and more While the African Americans left the thought of slavery behind they made a priority to reunite with their family and friends The cause of the Revolutionary War forced many Black people to migrate to the west afterwards and the scourge of poverty created much difficulty with housing African Americans competed with the Irish and Germans in jobs and had to share space with them 78 While the majority of free Black people lived in poverty some were able to establish successful businesses that catered to the Black community Racial discrimination often meant that Black people were not welcome or would be mistreated in White businesses and other establishments To counter this Black people like James Forten developed their own communities with Black owned businesses Black doctors lawyers and other businessmen were the foundation of the Black middle class 80 Many Black people organized to help strengthen the Black community and continue the fight against slavery One of these organizations was the American Society of Free Persons of Colour founded in 1830 This organization provided social aid to poor Black people and organized responses to political issues Further supporting the growth of the Black Community was the Black church usually the first community institution to be established Starting in the early 1800s 81 with the African Methodist Episcopal Church African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and other churches the Black church grew to be the focal point of the Black community The Black church was both an expression of community and unique African American spirituality and a reaction to European American discrimination The church also served as neighborhood centers where free Black people could celebrate their African heritage without intrusion by white detractors 78 The church was the center of the Black communities but it was also the center of education Since the church was part of the community and wanted to provide education they educated the freed and enslaved Black people 82 At first Black preachers formed separate congregations within the existing denominations such as social clubs or literary societies Because of discrimination at the higher levels of the church hierarchy some Black people like Richard Allen bishop simply founded separate Black denominations 83 Free Black people also established Black churches in the South before 1800 After the Great Awakening many Black people joined the Baptist Church which allowed for their participation including roles as elders and preachers For instance First Baptist Church and Gillfield Baptist Church of Petersburg Virginia both had organized congregations by 1800 and were the first Baptist churches in the city 84 Petersburg an industrial city by 1860 had 3 224 free Black people 36 of Black people and about 26 of all free persons the largest population in the South 85 86 In Virginia free Black people also created communities in Richmond Virginia and other towns where they could work as artisans and create businesses 87 Others were able to buy land and farm in frontier areas further from white control The Black community also established schools for Black children since they were often banned from entering public schools 88 Richard Allen organized the first Black Sunday school in America it was established in Philadelphia during 1795 89 Then five years later the priest Absalom Jones established a school for Black youth 89 Black Americans regarded education as the surest path to economic success moral improvement and personal happiness Only the sons and daughters of the Black middle class had the luxury of studying 78 Haiti s effect on slavery edit Main article Haitian Revolution The revolt of enslaved Haitians against their white slave owners which began in 1791 and lasted until 1801 was a primary source of fuel for both enslaved people and abolitionists arguing for the freedom of Africans in the U S In the 1833 edition of Nile s Weekly Register it is stated that freed Black people in Haiti were better off than their Jamaican counterparts and the positive effects of American Emancipation are alluded to throughout the paper 90 These anti slavery sentiments were popular among both white abolitionists and African American slaves Enslaved people rallied around these ideas with rebellions against their masters as well as white bystanders during the Denmark Vesey Conspiracy of 1822 and the Nat Turner Rebellion of 1831 Leaders and plantation owners were also very concerned about the consequences Haiti s revolution would have on early America Thomas Jefferson for one was wary of the instability of the West Indies referring to Haiti 91 Dred Scott v Sandford edit Main article Dred Scott v Sandford nbsp Peter 92 aka Gordon a former enslaved person displays the telltale criss cross keloid scars from being bullwhipped 1863 Dred Scott was an enslaved man whose owner had taken him to live in the free state of Illinois After his owner s death Dred Scott sued in court for his freedom on the basis of his having lived in a free state for a long period The Black community received an enormous shock with the Supreme Court s Dred Scott decision in March 1857 93 Black people were not American citizens and could never be citizens the court said in a decision roundly denounced by the Republican Party as well as the abolitionists Because enslaved people were property not people by this ruling they could not sue in court The decision was finally reversed by the Civil Rights Act of 1865 94 In what is sometimes considered mere obiter dictum the Court went on to hold that Congress had no authority to prohibit slavery in federal territories because enslaved people are personal property and the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution protects property owners against deprivation of their property without due process of law Although the Supreme Court has never explicitly overruled the Dred Scott case the Court stated in the Slaughter House Cases that at least one part of it had already been overruled by the Fourteenth Amendment in 1868 which begins by stating All persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside 95 American Civil War and emancipation editMain articles American Civil War and Emancipation Proclamation See also Military history of African Americans in the American Civil War The Emancipation Proclamation was an executive order issued by President Abraham Lincoln on January 1 1863 In a single stroke it changed the legal status as recognized by the U S government of 3 million enslaved people in designated areas of the Confederacy from slave to free Its practical effect was that as soon as an enslaved person escaped from slavery by running away or through advances of federal troops the enslaved person became legally and actually free The owners were never compensated Plantation owners realizing that emancipation would destroy their economic system sometimes moved their enslaved people as far as possible out of reach of the Union army By June 1865 the Union Army controlled all of the Confederacy and liberated all the designated enslaved people 96 About 200 000 free Black people and former enslaved people served in the Union Army and Navy thus providing a basis for a claim to full citizenship 97 The dislocations of war and Reconstruction had a severe negative impact on the Black population with much sickness and death 98 Reconstruction editMain articles Civil rights movement 1865 1896 Reconstruction era and African American officeholders during and following the Reconstruction era See also Freedmen s Bureau nbsp The Emancipation Proclamation The Civil Rights Act of 1866 made Black people full U S citizens and this repealed the Dred Scott decision In 1868 the 14th Amendment granted full U S citizenship to African Americans The 15th Amendment ratified in 1870 extended the right to vote to Black males The Freedmen s Bureau was an important institution established to create social and economic order in Southern states 20 After the Union victory over the Confederacy a brief period of Southern Black progress called Reconstruction followed During Reconstruction the states that had seceded were readmitted into the Union 99 From 1865 to 1877 under the protection of Union troops some strides were made toward equal rights for African Americans Southern Black men began to vote and they were also elected to serve in the United States Congress as well as in local offices such as the office of sheriff The safety which was provided by the troops did not last long however and white Southerners frequently terrorized Black voters Coalitions of white and Black Republicans passed bills in order to establish the first public school systems in most states of the South although sufficient funding was hard to find Black people established their own churches towns and businesses Tens of thousands migrated to Mississippi for the chance to clear and own their own land as 90 percent of the bottomlands were undeveloped By the end of the 19th century two thirds of the farmers who owned land in the Mississippi Delta bottomlands were Black 100 nbsp African American children in South Carolina picking cotton ca 1870Hiram Revels became the first African American senator in the U S Congress in 1870 Other African Americans soon came to Congress from South Carolina Georgia Alabama and Mississippi These new politicians supported the Republicans and tried to bring further improvements to the lives of African Americans Revels and others understood that white people may have felt threatened by the African American congressmen Revels stated The white race has no better friend than I I am true to my own race I wish to see all done that can be done to assist Black men in acquiring property in becoming intelligent enlightened citizens but at the same time I would not have anything done which would harm the white race 101 Blanche K Bruce was the other African American who became a U S senator during this period African Americans elected to the House of Representatives during this time included Benjamin S Turner Josiah T Walls Joseph H Rainey Robert Brown Elliot Robert D De Large and Jefferson H Long Frederick Douglass also served in the different government jobs during Reconstruction including Minister Resident and Counsel General to Haiti Recorder of Deeds and U S Marshall 102 Bruce became a Senator in 1874 and represented the state of Mississippi He worked with white politicians from his region in order to hopefully help his fellow African Americans and other minority groups such as Chinese immigrants and Native Americans He even supported efforts to end restrictions on former Confederates political participation 101 The aftermath of the Civil War accelerated the process of a national African American identity formation 103 Some civil rights activists such as W E B Du Bois disagree that identity was achieved after the Civil War 104 African Americans in the post Civil War era were faced with many rules and regulations that even though they were free prevented them from enjoying the same amount of freedom as white citizens had 105 Tens of thousands of Black northerners left homes and careers and also migrated to the defeated South building schools printing newspapers and opening businesses As Joel Williamson puts it Many of the migrants women as well as men came as teachers sponsored by a dozen or so benevolent societies arriving in the still turbulent wake of Union armies Others came to organize relief for the refugees Still others came south as religious missionaries Some came south as business or professional people seeking opportunity on this special Black frontier Finally thousands came as soldiers and when the war was over many of their young men remained there or after a stay of some months in the North they returned in order to complete their education 106 nbsp A large group of African American spectators stands on the banks of Buffalo Bayou to witness a baptism ca 1900 Nadir of American race relations editMain articles Disfranchisement after the Reconstruction era and Nadir of American race relations See also Jim Crow laws and Civil rights movement 1865 1896 The Jim Crow laws were state and local laws in the United States enacted between 1876 and 1965 They mandated de jure segregation in all public facilities with a supposedly separate but equal status for Black Americans In reality this led to treatment and accommodations that were usually inferior to those provided for white Americans systematizing a number of economic educational and social disadvantages 107 In the face of years of mounting violence and intimidation directed at Blacks as well as whites sympathetic to their cause the U S government retreated from its pledge to guarantee constitutional protections to freedmen and women When President Rutherford B Hayes withdrew Union troops from the South in 1877 as a result of a national compromise on the election Black people lost most of their political power Men like Benjamin Pap Singleton began speaking of leaving the South This idea culminated in the 1879 80 movement of the Exodusters who migrated to Kansas where Blacks had much more freedom and it was easier to acquire land 108 nbsp 2Sign for Colored waiting room Georgia 1943When Democrats took control of Tennessee in 1888 they passed laws making voter registration more complicated and ended the most competitive political state in the South Voting by Black people in rural areas and small towns dropped sharply as did voting by poor whites 109 110 From 1890 to 1908 starting with Mississippi and ending with Georgia ten of eleven Southern states adopted new constitutions or amendments that effectively disenfranchised most Black people and many poor whites Using a combination of provisions such as poll taxes residency requirements and literacy tests states dramatically decreased Black voter registration and turnout in some cases to zero 111 The grandfather clause was used in many states temporarily to exempt illiterate white voters from literacy tests As power became concentrated under the Democratic Party in the South the party positioned itself as a private club and instituted white primaries closing Black people out of the only competitive contests By 1910 one party white rule was firmly established across the South Although African Americans quickly started litigation to challenge such provisions early court decisions at the state and national level went against them In Williams v Mississippi 1898 the US Supreme Court upheld state provisions This encouraged other Southern states to adopt similar measures over the next few years as noted above Booker T Washington of Tuskegee Institute secretly worked with Northern supporters to raise funds and provide representation for African Americans in additional cases such as Giles v Harris 1903 and Giles v Teasley 1904 but again the Supreme Court upheld the states 111 Segregation for the first time became a standard legal process in the South it was informal in Northern cities Jim Crow limited Black access to transportation schools restaurants and other public facilities Most southern blacks for decades continued to struggle in grinding poverty as agricultural domestic and menial laborers Many became sharecroppers sharing the crop with the white land owners Racial terrorism edit In 1865 the Ku Klux Klan a secret white supremacist criminal organization dedicated to destroying the Republican Party in the South especially by terrorizing Black leaders was formed Klansmen hid behind masks and robes to hide their identity while they carried out violence and property damage The Klan used terrorism especially murder and threats of murder arson and intimidation The Klan s excesses led to the passage of legislation against it and with Federal enforcement it was destroyed by 1871 112 The anti Republican and anti freedmen sentiment only briefly went underground as violence arose in other incidents especially after Louisiana s disputed state election in 1872 which contributed to the Colfax and Coushatta massacres in Louisiana in 1873 and 1874 Tensions and rumors were high in many parts of the South When violence erupted African Americans consistently were killed at a much higher rate than were European Americans Historians of the 20th century have renamed events long called riots in southern history The common stories featured whites heroically saving the community from marauding Black people Upon examination of the evidence historians have called numerous such events massacres as at Colfax because of the disproportionate number of fatalities for Black people as opposed to whites The mob violence there resulted in 40 50 Black people dead for each of the three whites killed 113 While not as widely known as the Klan the paramilitary organizations that arose in the South during the mid 1870s as the white Democrats mounted a stronger insurgency were more directed and effective than the Klan in challenging Republican governments suppressing the Black vote and achieving political goals Unlike the Klan paramilitary members operated openly often solicited newspaper coverage and had distinct political goals to turn Republicans out of office and suppress or dissuade Black voting in order to regain power in 1876 Groups included the White League that started from white militias in Grant Parish Louisiana in 1874 and spread in the Deep South the Red Shirts that started in Mississippi in 1875 but had chapters arise and was prominent in the 1876 election campaign in South Carolina as well as in North Carolina and other White Line organizations such as rifle clubs 114 nbsp Robert McDaniels lynched Apr 13 1937The Jim Crow era accompanied the most cruel wave of racial suppression that America has yet experienced Between 1890 and 1940 millions of African Americans were disenfranchised killed and brutalized According to newspaper records kept at the Tuskegee Institute about 5 000 men women and children were murdered in documented extrajudicial mob violence called lynchings The journalist Ida B Wells estimated that lynchings not reported by the newspapers plus similar executions under the veneer of due process may have amounted to about 20 000 killings 115 Of the tens of thousands of lynchers and onlookers during this period it is reported that fewer than 50 whites were ever indicted for their crimes and only four were sentenced Because Black people were disenfranchised they could not sit on juries or have any part in the political process including local offices Meanwhile the lynchings were used as a weapon of terror to keep millions of African Americans living in a constant state of anxiety and fear 116 Most Black people were denied their right to keep and bear arms under Jim Crow laws and they were therefore unable to protect themselves or their families 117 Early civil rights movement editMain article Civil rights movement 1896 1954 In response to these and other setbacks in the summer of 1905 W E B Du Bois and 28 other prominent African American men met secretly at Niagara Falls Ontario There they produced a manifesto in which they called for an end to racial discrimination full civil liberties for African Americans and recognition of human brotherhood The organization which they established came to be called the Niagara Movement After the notorious Springfield Illinois race riot of 1908 a group of concerned Whites joined the leadership of the Niagara Movement and formed the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People NAACP a year later in 1909 Under the leadership of Du Bois the NAACP mounted legal challenges to segregation and it also lobbied legislatures on behalf of Black Americans While the NAACP used the court system to promote equality at the local level African Americans adopted a self help strategy They pooled their resources to create independent community and institutional lives for themselves They established schools churches social welfare institutions banks African American newspapers and small businesses which could serve their communities 118 The main organizer of national and local self help organizations was Alabama educator Booker T Washington 119 Some Progressive Era reformers were concerned about the Black condition In 1908 after the 1906 Atlanta Race Riot got him involved Ray Stannard Baker published the book Following the Color Line An Account of Negro Citizenship in the American Democracy becoming the first prominent journalist to examine America s racial divide it was extremely successful Sociologist Rupert Vance says it is the best account of race relations in the South during the period one that reads like field notes for the future historian This account was written during the zenith of Washingtonian movement and shows the optimism that it inspired among both liberals and moderates The book is also notable for its realistic accounts of Negro town life 120 Great Migration and the Harlem Renaissance editMain articles Great Migration African American and Harlem Renaissance nbsp The Great Migration shown through changes in African American share of population in major U S cities 1910 1940 and 1940 1970During the first half of the 20th century the largest internal population shift in U S history took place Starting about 1910 through the Great Migration over five million African Americans made choices and voted with their feet by moving from the South to northern and western cities in hopes of escaping political discrimination and hatred violence finding better jobs voting and enjoying greater equality and education for their children 121 In the 1920s the concentration of Black people in New York led to the cultural movement known as the Harlem Renaissance whose influence reached nationwide Black intellectual and cultural circles were influenced by thinkers such as Aime Cesaire and Leopold Sedar Senghor who celebrated Blackness or negritude arts and letters flourished Writers Zora Neale Hurston Langston Hughes Nella Larsen Claude McKay and Richard Wright and artists Lois Mailou Jones William H Johnson Romare Bearden Jacob Lawrence and Archibald Motley gained prominence 122 The South Side of Chicago a destination for many on the trains up from Mississippi Arkansas and Louisiana joined Harlem as a sort of Black capital for the nation It generated flourishing businesses music arts and foods A new generation of powerful African American political leaders and organizations also came to the fore Typified by Congressman William Dawson 1886 1970 Membership in the NAACP rapidly increased as it mounted an anti lynching campaign in reaction to ongoing southern white violence against blacks Marcus Garvey s Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League the Nation of Islam and union organizer A Philip Randolph s Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters part of the American Federation of labor all were established during this period and found support among African Americans who became urbanized 123 Black owned businesses editMain article African American businesses Businesses operated at the local level and included beauty shops barber shops funeral parlors and the like Booker T Washington organized them nationally into the National Negro Business League 124 The more ambitious Black businessman with a larger vision avoided small towns and rural areas and headed to progressive large cities 125 They sent their children to elite Black colleges such as Howard Spellman and Morehouse by the 1970s they were accepted in more than token numbers at national schools such as the Ivy League Graduates were hired by major national corporations They were active in the Urban League the United Negro College Fund and the NAACP and were much more likely to be Episcopalians than Baptists 126 127 128 Women in the beauty business edit Although most prominent African American businesses have been owned by men women played a major role especially in the area of beauty Standards of beauty were different for whites and Black people and the Black community developed its own standards with an emphasis on hair care Beauticians could work out of their own homes and did not need storefronts As a result Black beauticians were numerous in the rural South despite the absence of cities and towns They pioneered the use of cosmetics at a time when rural white women in the South avoided them As Blain Roberts has shown beauticians offered their clients a space to feel pampered and beautiful in the context of their own community because Inside Black beauty shops rituals of beautification converged with rituals of socialization Beauty contests emerged in the 1920s and in the white community they were linked to agricultural county fairs By contrast in the Black community beauty contests were developed out of the homecoming ceremonies at their high schools and colleges 129 130 The most famous entrepreneur was Madame C J Walker 1867 1919 she built a national franchise business called Madame C J Walker Manufacturing Company based on her invention of the first successful hair straightening process 131 World War I editSee also Military history of African Americans World War I Further information Woodrow Wilson and race nbsp African American soldiers of the U S Army marching northwest of Verdun France 5 November 1918 nbsp Soldiers of the 369th 15th N Y who won the Croix de Guerre for gallantry in action 1919Soldiers edit The U S armed forces remained segregated during World War I Still many African Americans eagerly volunteered to join the Allied cause following America s entry into the war More than two million African American men rushed to register for the draft By the time of the armistice with Germany in November 1918 over 350 000 African Americans had served with the American Expeditionary Force on the Western Front 132 133 134 Most African American units were relegated to support roles and did not see combat Still African Americans played a significant role in America s war effort Four African American regiments were integrated into French units because the French suffered heavy losses and badly needed men after three years of a terrible war One of the most distinguished units was the 369th Infantry Regiment known as the Harlem Hellfighters which was on the front lines for six months longer than any other American unit in the war 171 members of the 369th were awarded the Legion of Merit citation needed nbsp 157th I D Red Hand flag 135 drawn by General Mariano GoybetFrom May 1918 to November 1918 the 371st and the 372nd American Regiments were integrated under the 157th Red Hand Division 135 commanded by the French General Mariano Goybet He was awarded the Distinguished Service Medal U S Army by General Pershing 136 The African American Regiments earned glory in the decisive final offensive in Champagne region of France The two Regiments were decorated by the French Croix de Guerre for their gallantry in the Meuse Argonne Offensive 137 138 December 12 1918General Order No 245 The red hand division during nine days of violent fight was always an exceptional model for the victorious advance of the fourth army Dear Friends of America you will be back home to the other side of the ocean don t forget The Red Hand Division Our friendship has been cemented in the blood of the brave and such a link will be never destroyed Remember your General who is proud to have commanded you and be sure of his endless recognition General Goybet commanding the 157th Division 139 During World War I the 372nd Infantry Regiment was composed of segregated National Guard units as well as draftees 140 Among these National Guard units the 1st District of Columbia was re designated the 1st Battalion of the 372nd Infantry nbsp Enlisted men of the 1st Separate Battalion an all African American unit examining weapons in the old army arms room prior to World War IIn 1917 fearing espionage D C National Guard elements were mobilized 12 days before the U S officially entered World War I to protect reservoirs and power plants around District of Columbia Military officials were concerned that too many of the D C units were made up of men with foreign roots thus the job of protecting vital facilities fell to the all black 1st Separate Infantry the only unit the military believed could be trusted with this mission nbsp Colored messengers of Motorcycle Corps 372nd Headquarters who kept communication lines alive at all hours during the big drive in Champagne Argonne and at Verdun Eventually the 1st Separate was mustered into active service and re designated the 1st Battalion of the 372nd Infantry In France unsure of what to do with an African American regiment the 372nd was attached to the French Army s 157th Red Hand Division The soldiers fought in Meuse Argonne Lorraine and Alsace where they were awarded the Croix de Guerre one of the highest honors bestowed by the French military General Goybet the 157th commanding general gave the unit a Red Hand insignia in honor of their service The red hand appears today on the crest of the 372nd Military Police Battalion Although many D C National Guard units were mobilized the 372nd was the only one to actually see combat during the war 141 nbsp Distinctive unit Insignia 372 MP Bn Red hand on right sideCorporal Freddie Stowers of the 371st Infantry Regiment was posthumously awarded a Medal of Honor the first African American to be so honored for actions in World War I During action in France Stowers had led an assault on German trenches continuing to lead and encourage his men even after being wounded twice Stowers died from his wounds but his men continued the fight on a German machine gun nest near Bussy farm in Champagne and eventually defeated the German troops 142 nbsp Stowers sisters Georgina Palmer and Mary Bowens with Barbara Bush and President George H W Bush at the Medal of Honor presentation ceremonyStowers was recommended for the Medal of Honor shortly after his death but according to the Army the nomination was misplaced Many believed the recommendation had been intentionally ignored due to institutional racism in the Armed Forces In 1990 under pressure from Congress the Defense Department launched an investigation Based on findings from this investigation the Army Decorations Board approved the award of the Medal of Honor to Stowers On April 24 1991 73 years after he was killed in action Stowers two surviving sisters received the Medal of Honor from President George H W Bush at the White House 143 Home front and postwar edit Further information United States home front during World War I and Great Migration African American With an enormous demand for expansion of the defense industries the new draft law in effect and the cut off of immigration from Europe demand was very high for underemployed farmers from the South Hundreds of thousands of African Americans took the trains to Northern industrial centers in a dramatic historical event known as the Great Migration Migrants going to Pittsburgh and surrounding mill towns in western Pennsylvania between 1890 and 1930 faced racial discrimination and limited economic opportunities The Black population in Pittsburgh jumped from 6 000 in 1880 to 27 000 in 1910 Many took highly paid skilled jobs in the steel mills Pittsburgh s Black population increased to 37 700 in 1920 6 4 of the total while the Black element in Homestead Rankin Braddock and others nearly doubled They succeeded in building effective community responses that enabled the survival of new communities 144 145 Historian Joe Trotter explains the decision process Although African Americans often expressed their views of the Great Migration in biblical terms and received encouragement from northern black newspapers railroad companies and industrial labor agents they also drew upon family and friendship networks to help in the move to Western Pennsylvania They formed migration clubs pooled their money bought tickets at reduced rates and often moved ingroups Before they made the decision to move they gathered information and debated the pros and cons of the process In barbershops poolrooms and grocery stores in churches lodge halls and clubhouses and in private homes southern blacks discussed debated and decided what was good and what was bad about moving to the urban North 146 After the war ended and the soldiers returned home tensions were very high with serious labor union strikes and inter racial riots in major cities The summer of 1919 was known as the Red Summer with outbreaks of racial violence killing about 1 000 people across the nation most of whom were Black 147 148 Nevertheless the newly established Black communities in the North nearly all endured Joe Trotter explains how the Blacks built new institutions for their new communities in the Pittsburgh area Black churches fraternal orders and newspapers especially the Pittsburgh Courier organizations such as the NAACP Urban League and Garvey Movement social clubs restaurants and baseball teams hotels beauty shops barber shops and taverns all proliferated 149 New Deal editMain article New Deal African Americans nbsp WPA poster promoting the benefits of employmentThe Great Depression hit Black America hard In 1930 it was reported that 4 out of 5 Black people lived in the South the average life expectancy for Black people was 15 years less than whites and the Black infant mortality rate at 12 was double that of whites 150 In Chicago Black people made up 4 of the population and 16 of the unemployed while in Pittsburgh blacks were 8 of the population and 40 of the unemployed 151 In January 1934 the journalist Lorena Hickok reported from rural Georgia that she had seen half starved Whites and Blacks struggle in competition for less to eat than my dog gets at home for the privilege of living in huts that are infinitely less comfortable than his kennel 152 She also described most Southern Black people who made worked as sharecroppers as living under a system very close to slavery 152 A visiting British journalist wrote she had traveled over most of Europe and part of Africa but I have never seen such terrible sights as I saw yesterday among the sharecroppers of Arkansas 153 The New Deal did not have a specific program for Black people only but it sought to incorporate them in all the relief programs that it began 154 155 The most important relief agencies were the CCC for young men who worked in segregated units the FERA relief programs in 1933 35 run by local towns and cities and especially the WPA which employed 2 000 000 or more workers nationwide under federal control 1935 42 All races had had the same wage rates and working conditions in the WPA 156 A rival federal agency was the Public Works Administration PWA headed by long time civil rights activist Harold Ickes It set quotas for private firms hiring skilled and unskilled Black people in construction projects financed through the PWA overcoming the objections of labor unions In this way the New Deal ensured that blacks were 13 of the unskilled PWA jobs in Chicago 60 in Philadelphia and 71 in Jacksonville Florida their share of the skilled jobs was 4 6 and 17 respectively 157 In the Department of Agriculture there was a lengthy bureaucratic struggle in 1933 35 between one faction which favored rising prices for farmers vs another faction which favored reforms to assist sharecroppers especially Black ones When one Agriculture Department official Alger Hiss in early 1935 wrote up a directive to ensure that Southern landlords were paying sharecroppers for their labor which most of them did not Senator Ellison D Smith stormed into his office and shouted Young fella you can t do this to my niggers paying checks to them 158 The Agriculture Secretary Henry A Wallace sided with Smith and agreed to cancel the directive 159 As it turned out the most effective way for Black sharecroppers to escape a life of poverty in the South was to move to the North or California An immediate response was a shift in the Black vote in Northern cities from the GOP to the Democrats blacks seldom voted in the South 160 In Southern states where few Black people voted Black leaders seized the opportunity to work inside the new federal agencies as social workers and administrators with an eye to preparing a new generation who would become leaders of grass roots constituencies that could be mobilized at some future date for civil rights 161 President Franklin D Roosevelt appointed the first federal black judge William H Hastie and created an unofficial black cabinet led by Mary McLeod Bethune to advise him 162 Roosevelt ordered that federal agencies such as the CCC WPA and PWA were not to discriminate against Black Americans 162 The president s wife Eleanor Roosevelt who was a close friend of Bethune s was notably sympathetic towards African Americans and constantly in private urged her husband to do more to try help Black Americans 162 The fact that the Civil Works Administration paid the same wages to Black workers as white workers sparked much resentment in the South and as early as 1933 conservative Southern politicians who claiming that federal relief payments were causing Black people to move to the cities to become a permanent welfare class 163 Studies showed that Black people were twice likely to be unemployed as whites and one fifth of all people receiving federal relief payments were Black which was double their share of the population 164 In Chicago the Black community had been a stronghold of the Republican machine but in the Great Depression the machine fell apart Voters and leaders moved en masse into the Democratic Party as the New Deal offered relief programs and the city Democratic machine offered suitable positions in the Democratic Party for leaders such as William Dawson who went to Congress 165 Militants demanded a federal anti lynching bill but President Roosevelt knew it would never pass Congress but would split his New Deal coalition 166 Because conservative white Southerners tended to vote as a bloc for the Democratic Party with all of the Senators and Congressmen from the South in the 1930s being Democrats this tended to pull the national Democratic Party to the right on many issues while Southern politicians formed a powerful bloc in Congress 167 When a Black minister Marshall L Shepard delivered the opening prayer at the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia in 1936 Senator Ellison D Smith stormed out screaming This mongrel meeting ain t no place for a white man 167 Though Smith s reaction was extreme other Democratic politicians from the South made it clear to Roosevelt that they were very displeased In the 1936 election African Americans who could vote overwhelmingly did so for Roosevelt marking the first time that a Democratic candidate for president had won the Black vote 168 In November 1936 the American duo Buck and Bubbles became the first Black people to appear on television albeit on a British television channel 169 In April 1937 Congressman Earl C Michener read out on the floor of the House of Representatives an account of the lynching of Roosevelt Townes and Robert McDaniels in Duck Hill Mississippi on 13 April 1937 describing in much detail how a white mob tied two Black men to a tree tortured them with blowtorches and finally killed them 170 Michener introduced an anti lynching bill that passed the House but which was stopped in the Senate as Southern senators filibustered the bill until it was withdrawn on 21 February 1938 171 Both civil rights leaders and the First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt pressed President Roosevelt to support the anti lynching bill but his support was half hearted at best 172 Roosevelt told Walter Francis White of the NAACP that he personally supported the anti lynching bill but that I did not choose the tools with which I must work Had I been permitted to choose them I would have selected quite different ones But I ve got to get legislation passed to save America The Southerners by reason of the seniority rule in Congress are chairmen or occupy strategic places on most of the Senate and House committees If I came out for the antilynching bill now they will block every bill I ask Congress to pass to keep America from collapsing I just can t take the risk 172 Through Roosevelt was sympathetic and his wife even more so towards the plight of African Americans but the power of the Southern Democratic bloc in Congress whom he did not wish to take on limited his options 172 Through not explicitly designed to assist Black Americans Roosevelt supported the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 which imposed a national minimum wage of 40 cents per hour and a forty hour work week while banning child labor which was intended to assist poorer Americans 173 The Southern congressional bloc were vehemently opposed to the Fair Labor Standards Act which they saw as an attack on the entire Southern way of life which was based upon extremely low wages for example the minimum wage was 50 cents per day in South Carolina and caused some of them to break with Roosevelt 174 In 1938 Roosevelt campaigned in the Democratic primaries to defeat three conservative Southern Democratic senators Walter F George Millard Tydings and Ellison Cotton Ed Smith whom were all returned 175 Later in 1938 the conservative Southern Democrats allied themselves with conservative Republicans forming an alliance in Congress which sharply limited Roosevelt s ability to pass liberal legislation 176 After Congress passed the Selective Service Act in September 1940 establishing the draft A Philip Randolph the president of all black Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters union had his union issue a resolution calling for the government to desegregate the military 177 As the First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt had attended the meeting of the brotherhood that passed the resolution it was widely believed that the president was supportive 177 Randolph subsequently visited the White House on 27 September 1940 where President Roosevelt seemed to be equally sympathetic 178 Randolph felt very betrayed where he learned the military was to remain segregated after all despite the president s warm words 179 Roosevelt had begun a program of rearmament and feeling the president was not to be trusted Randolph formed the March on Washington Movement announcing plans for a huge civil rights march in Washington DC that would demand desegregation of the military and the factories in the defense industry on 1 July 1941 179 In June 1941 as the deadline for the march approached Roosevelt asked for it to be cancelled saying that 100 000 Black people demonstrating in Washington would create problems for him 179 On 18 June 1941 Randolph met with Roosevelt with the mayor of New York Fiorello H La Guardia serving as a mediator where in a compromise it was agreed that the march would be cancelled in exchange for Executive Order 8802 which banned discrimination in factories making weapons for the military 180 In 1941 the Roosevelt administration through officially neutral was leaning in very Allied direction with the United States providing weapons to Great Britain and China to be joined by the Soviet Union after 22 June 1941 and the president needed the co operation of Congress as much possible where isolationist voices were frequently heard Roosevelt argued to Randolph that he could not antagonize the powerful bloc of conservative Southern Democrats in Congress and desegregation of the military was out of the question as the Southern Democrats would never accept it by contrast as La Guardia pointed out most of the factories in the defense industry were located in California the Midwest and the Northeast 180 Cotton edit The largest group of Black people worked in the cotton farms of the Deep South as sharecroppers or tenant farmers a few owned their farms Large numbers of whites also were tenant farmers and sharecroppers Tenant farming characterized the cotton and tobacco production in the post Civil War South As the agricultural economy plummeted in the early 1930s all farmers in all parts of the nation were badly hurt Worst hurt were the tenant farmers who had relatively more control and sharecroppers who had less control as well as daily laborers mostly Black with least control 181 The problem was very low prices for farm products and the New Deal solution was to raise them by cutting production It accomplished this in the South by the AAA which gave landowners acreage reduction contracts by which they were paid to not grow cotton or tobacco on a portion of their land By law they were required to pay the tenant farmers and sharecroppers on their land a portion of the money but some cheated on this provision hurting their tenants and croppers The farm wage workers who worked directly for the landowner were mostly the ones who lost their jobs For most tenants and sharecroppers the AAA was a major help Researchers at the time concluded To the extent that the AAA control program has been responsible for the increased price of cotton we conclude that it has increased the amount of goods and services consumed by the cotton tenants and croppers Furthermore the landowners typically let their tenants and croppers use the land taken out of production for their own personal use in growing food and feed crops which further increased their standard of living Another consequence was that the historic high levels of turnover from year to year declined sharply as tenants and coppers tend to stay with the same landowner Researchers concluded As a rule planters seem to prefer Negroes to whites as tenants and coppers 182 Once mechanization came to cotton after 1945 the tenants and sharecroppers were largely surplus they moved to towns and cities citation needed World War II editSee also Military history of African Americans World War II and Racism against African Americans in the U S military World War II nbsp Black soldiers tracking a sniper Omaha Beachhead near Vierville sur Mer France 10 June 1944A call for The Double Victory edit The African American newspaper The Pittsburgh Courier called for the double victory or Double V campaign in a 1942 editorial saying that all Black people should work for victory over our enemies at home and victory over our enemies on the battlefield abroad 183 The newspaper argued that a victory of the Axis powers especially Nazi Germany would be a disaster for African Americans while at the same time the war presented the opportunity to persuade embarrass compel and shame our government and our nation into a more enlightened attitude towards a tenth of its people 183 The slogan of a double victory over fascism abroad and racism at home was widely taken up by African Americans during the war 183 Wartime service edit nbsp Eight Tuskegee Airmen in front of a P 40 fighter aircraftOver 1 9 million Black people served in uniform during World War II They served in segregated units 184 185 Black women served in the Army s WAAC and WAC but very few served in the Navy 186 The draft starkly exposed the poor living conditions of most African Americans with the Selective Service Boards turning down 46 of the Black men called up on health grounds as compared to 30 of the white men called up 183 At least a third of the black men in the South called up by the draft boards turned out to be illiterate 183 Southern Black people fared badly on the Army General Classification Test AGCT an aptitude test designed to determine the most suitable role for those who were drafted and which was not an IQ test 187 Of the Black men from the South drafted 84 fell into the two lowest categories on the AGCT 188 Owing to the high failure rate caused by the almost non existent education system for African Americans in the South the Army was forced to offer remedial instruction for Afro Americans who fell into the lower categories of the AGCT 188 By 1945 about 150 000 Black men had learned how to read and write while in the Army 188 The poor living conditions in rural America which afflicted both white and Black Americans led the Army to undertake remedial health work as well Army optometrists fitted 2 25 million men suffering from poor eyesight with eyeglasses to allow them to be drafted while Army dentists fitted 2 5 million draftees who would have been otherwise disqualified for the bad state of their teeth with dentures 189 Most of the Army s 231 training camps were located in the South which was mostly rural and where land was cheaper 190 Black people from outside of the South that were sent to the training camps found life in the South almost unbearable 191 Tensions at army and navy training bases between Black and white trainees resulted in several outbreaks of racial violence with Black trainees sometimes being lynched 191 In the so called Battle of Bamber Bridge on 24 25 June 1943 in the Lancashire town of Bamber Bridge saw a shoot out between white and Black soldiers that left one dead 192 In an attempt to solve the problem of racial violence the War Department in 1943 commissioned the director Frank Capra to make the propaganda film The Negro Soldier 191 The segregated 92nd Division which served in Italy was noted for the antagonistic relations between its white officers and Black soldiers 188 In an attempt to ease the racial tensions the 92nd Division was integrated in 1944 by having the all Japanese American 442nd Regimental Combat Team together with one white regiment assigned to it 188 The segregated 93rd Division which served in the Pacific was assigned mopping up duties on the islands that the Americans mostly controlled 188 Black servicemen greatly resented segregation and those serving in Europe complained that German POWs were served better food than what they were 191 The Navy was segregated and Black sailors were usually assigned menial work such as stevedores 193 At Port Chicago on 17 July 1944 while mostly Black stevedores were loading up two Navy supply ships an explosion occurred that killed 320 men of which 202 were Black 194 The explosion was widely blamed on the lack of training for Black stevedores and 50 of the survivors of the explosion refused an order to return to work demanding safety training first 195 At the subsequent court martial for the Port Chicago 50 on the charges of mutiny their defense lawyer Thurgood Marshall stated Negroes in the Navy don t mind loading ammunition They just want to know why they are the only ones doing the loading They want to know why they are segregated why they don t get promoted and why the Navy disregarded official warnings by the San Francisco waterfront unions that an explosion was inevitable if they persisted in using untrained seamen in the loading of ammunition 195 Though the sailors were convicted the Port Chicago disaster led the Navy in August 1944 to allow Black sailors to serve alongside white sailors on ships through Black people could only make up 10 of the crew 195 Through the Army was reluctant to send Black units into combat famous segregated units such as the Tuskegee Airmen and the U S 761st Tank Battalion proved their value in combat 196 Approximately 75 percent of the soldiers who served in the European theater as truckers for the Red Ball Express and kept Allied supply lines open were African American 197 During the crisis of the Battle of the Bulge in December 1944 the Army allowed several integrated infantry platoons to be formed through these were broken up once the crisis passed 193 However the experiment of the integrated platoons in December 1944 showed that integration did not mean the collapse of military discipline as many claimed that it would and was a factor in the later desegregation of the armed forces 193 A total of 708 African Americans were killed in combat during World War II 198 The distinguished service of these units was a factor in President Harry S Truman s order to end discrimination in the Armed Forces in July 1948 with the promulgation of Executive Order 9981 This led in turn to the integration of the Air Force and the other services by the early 1950s 199 200 In his book A Rising Wind Walter Francis White of the NAACP wrote World War II has immeasurably magnified the Negro s awareness of the American profession and practice of democracy Black veterans will return home convinced that whatever betterment of their lot is achieved must come largely from their own efforts They will return determined to use those efforts to the utmost 201 Home front edit nbsp Rosie the RiveterDue to massive shortages as a result of the American entry into World War II defense employers from Northern and Western cities went to the South to convince blacks and whites there to leave the region in promise of higher wages and better opportunities As a result African Americans left the South in large numbers to munitions centers in the North and West to take advantage of the shortages caused by the war sparking the Second Great Migration While they somewhat lived in better conditions than the South for instance they could vote and send children to better schools they nevertheless faced widespread discrimination due to bigotry and fear of competition of housing and jobs among white residents citation needed When Roosevelt learned that many companies in the defense industry were violating the spirit if not the letter of Executive Order 8802 by only employing Black people in menial positions such as janitors and denying them the opportunity to work as highly paid skilled laborers he significantly strengthened the Fair Employment Practice Committee FEPC with orders to fine the corporations that did not treat their Black employees equally 202 In 1943 Roosevelt gave the FEPC a budget of half million dollars and replaced the unpaid volunteers who had previously staffed the FEPC with a paid staff concentrated in regional headquarters across the nation with instructions to inspect the defense industry s factories to ensure the spirit and letter of Executive Order 8802 was being obeyed 202 Roosevelt believed that having Black men and women employed in the defense industry working as skilled laborers would give them far higher wages than what they ever had before and ultimately form the nucleus of a Black middle class 202 When the president learned that some unions were pushing for black employees to be given menial auxiliary jobs in the factories he instructed the National Labor Relations Board to decertify those unions 202 In 1944 when the union for trolley drivers in Philadelphia went on strike to protest plans to hire African Americans as trolley drivers Roosevelt sent in troops to break the strike 202 In 1942 Black people made up 3 of the workforce in the defense industry by 1945 Black people made up 8 of the workforce in defense industry factories Black people made up 10 of the population 202 Racial tensions were also high between whites and ethnic minorities that cities like Chicago Detroit Los Angeles and Harlem experienced race riots in 1943 203 In May 1943 in Mobile Alabama when the local shipyard promoted some Black men up to be trained as welders white workers rioted and seriously injured 11 of their Black co workers 192 In Los Angeles the Zoot Suit riots of 3 8 June 1943 saw white servicemen attacking Chicano Mexican American and Black youths for wearing zoot suits 192 On 15 June 1943 in Beaumont Texas a pogrom saw a white mob smash up Black homes while lynching 2 Black men 192 In Detroit which expanded massively during the war years with 50 000 Black people from the South and 200 000 hillbilly whites from Appalachia moving to the city to work in the factories competition for sparse rental housing had pushed tensions to the brink 192 On 20 June 1943 false rumors that a white mob had lynched 3 Black men led to an outbreak of racial rioting in Detroit that left 34 dead of whom 25 were Black 192 On 1 2 August 1943 another race riot in Harlem left 6 Black people dead 192 Politically Black people left the Republican Party and joined the Democratic New Deal Coalition of President Franklin D Roosevelt whom they widely admired 204 The political leaders ministers and newspaper editors who shaped opinion resolved on a Double V campaign Victory over German and Japanese fascism abroad and victory over discrimination at home Black newspapers created the Double V campaign to build Black morale and head off radical action 205 During the war years the NAACP expanded tenfold having over half a million members by 1945 183 The new civil rights group Committee of Racial Equality CORE founded in 1942 started demonstrations demanding desegregation of buses theaters and restaurants 183 At one CORE demonstration outside a segregated restaurant in Washington DC in 1944 had signs reading We Die Together Let s Eat Together and Are you for Hitler s Way or the American Way 183 In 1944 the Swedish economist Gunnar Myrdal published his bestselling book An American Dilemma The Negro Problem and Modern Democracy where he described in much detail the effects of white supremacy upon Black Americans and predicated in the long run the Jim Crow regime was unsustainable as he argued that after the war African Americans would be not willing to accept a permanent second class status 206 Most Black women had been farm laborers or domestics before the war 207 Despite discrimination and segregated facilities throughout the South they escaped the cotton patch and took blue collar jobs in the cities Working with the federal Fair Employment Practices Committee the NAACP and CIO unions these Black women fought a Double V campaign against the Axis abroad and against restrictive hiring practices at home Their efforts redefined citizenship equating their patriotism with war work and seeking equal employment opportunities government entitlements and better working conditions as conditions appropriate for full citizens 208 In the South Black women worked in segregated jobs in the West and most of the North they were integrated but wildcat strikes erupted in Detroit Baltimore and Evansville where white migrants from the South refused to work alongside Black women 209 210 The most largest of the hate strikes was the strike by white women at the Western Electric factory in Baltimore who objected to sharing a bathroom with Black women 192 Hollywood edit Stormy Weather 1943 starring Lena Horne Bill Bojangles Robinson and Cab Calloway s Band along with Cabin in the Sky 1943 starring Ethel Waters Eddie Rochester Anderson Lena Horne and Louis Satchmo Armstrong and other musicals of the 1940s opened new roles for Black people in Hollywood They broke through old stereotypes and far surpassed the limited poorly paid roles available in race films produced for all Black audiences 211 212 Second Great Migration editMain article Second Great Migration African American nbsp Graph showing the percentage of the African American population living in the American South 1790 2010 nbsp First and Second Great Migrations shown through changes in African American share of population in major U S cities 1916 1930 and 1940 1970The Second Great Migration was the migration of more than 5 million African Americans from the South to the other three regions of the United States It took place from 1941 through World War II and it lasted until 1970 213 It was much larger and of a different character than the first Great Migration 1910 1940 Some historians prefer to distinguish between the movements for those reasons In the Second Great Migration more than five million African Americans moved to cities in states in the Northeast Midwest and West including the West Coast where many skilled jobs in the defense industry were concentrated More of these migrants were already urban laborers who came from the cities of the South They were better educated and they had better skills than the people who did not migrate 213 Compared to the more rural migrants of the period 1910 40 many African Americans in the South were already living in urban areas and had urban job skills before they relocated They moved to take jobs in the burgeoning industrial cities and especially the many jobs in the defense industry during World War II Workers who were limited to segregated low skilled jobs in Southern cities were able to get highly skilled well paid jobs at West Coast shipyards 213 The effect of racially homogeneous communities composed largely of Black immigrants that formed because of spatial segregation in destination cities was that they were largely influenced by the Southern culture they brought with them The food music and even the discriminatory white police presence in these neighborhoods were all imported to a certain extent from the collective experiences of the highly concentrated African American migrants 214 Writers have often assumed that Southern migrants contributed disproportionately to changes in the African American family in the inner city However census data for 1940 through 1990 show that these families actually exhibited more traditional family patterns more children living with two parents more ever married women living with their spouses and fewer never married mothers 215 By the end of the Second Great Migration African Americans had become an urbanized population More than 80 percent of them lived in cities Fifty three percent of them remained in the Southern United States 40 percent of them lived in the Northeast and North Central states and 7 percent of them lived in the West 213 Civil rights era editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources African American history news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article Civil rights movement The Supreme Court handed down a landmark decision in the case of Brown v Board of Education 1954 of Topeka This decision applied to public facilities especially public schools Reforms occurred slowly and only after concerted activism by African Americans The ruling also brought new momentum to the Civil Rights Movement Boycotts against segregated public transportation systems sprang up in the South the most notable of which was the Montgomery bus boycott citation needed Civil rights groups such as the Southern Christian Leadership Conference SCLC organized across the South with tactics such as boycotts voter registration campaigns Freedom Rides and other nonviolent direct action such as marches pickets and sit ins to mobilize around issues of equal access and voting rights Southern segregationists fought back to block reform The conflict grew to involve steadily escalating physical violence bombings and intimidation by Southern whites Law enforcement responded to protesters with batons electric cattle prods fire hoses attack dogs and mass arrests citation needed In Virginia state legislators school board members and other public officials mounted a campaign of obstructionism and outright defiance to integration called Massive Resistance It entailed a series of actions to deny state funding to integrated schools and instead fund privately run segregation academies for white students Farmville Virginia in Prince Edward County was one of the plaintiff African American communities involved in the 1954 Brown v Board of Education Supreme Court decision As a last ditch effort to avoid court ordered desegregation officials in the county shut down the county s entire public school system in 1959 and it remained closed for five years 216 White students were able to attend private schools established by the community for the sole purpose of circumventing integration The largely Black rural population of the county had little recourse Some families were split up as parents sent their children to live with relatives in other locales to attend public school but the majority of Prince Edward s more than 2 000 black children as well as many poor whites simply remained unschooled until federal court action forced the schools to reopen five years later citation needed nbsp Martin Luther King Jr delivers his famous I Have a Dream speech during the March on WashingtonPerhaps the high point of the Civil Rights Movement was the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom which brought more than 250 000 marchers to the grounds of the Lincoln Memorial and the National Mall in Washington D C to speak out for an end to southern racial violence and police brutality equal opportunity in employment equal access in education and public accommodations The organizers of the march were called the Big Six of the Civil Rights Movement Bayard Rustin the strategist who has been called the invisible man of the Civil Rights Movement labor organizer and initiator of the march A Philip Randolph Roy Wilkins of the NAACP Whitney Young Jr of the National Urban League Martin Luther King Jr of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference SCLC James Farmer of the Congress on Racial Equality CORE and John Lewis of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee SNCC Also active behind the scenes and sharing the podium with King was Dorothy Height head of the National Council of Negro Women It was at this event on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial that King delivered his historic I Have a Dream speech citation needed This march the 1963 Birmingham Children s Crusade and other events were credited with putting pressure on President John F Kennedy and then Lyndon B Johnson that culminated in the passage the Civil Rights Act of 1964 that banned discrimination in public accommodations employment and labor unions citation needed nbsp President Johnson signs the historic Civil Rights Act of 1964 The Mississippi Freedom Summer of 1964 brought thousands of idealistic youth black and white to the state to run freedom schools to teach basic literacy history and civics Other volunteers were involved in voter registration drives The season was marked by harassment intimidation and violence directed at civil rights workers and their host families The disappearance of three youths James Chaney Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner in Philadelphia Mississippi captured the attention of the nation Six weeks later searchers found the savagely beaten body of Chaney a Black man in a muddy dam alongside the remains of his two white companions who had been shot to death There was national outrage at the escalating injustices of the Mississippi Blood Summer as it by then had come to be known and at the brutality of the murders citation needed In 1965 the Selma Voting Rights Movement its Selma to Montgomery marches and the tragic murders of two activists associated with the march inspired President Lyndon B Johnson to call for the full Voting Rights Act of 1965 which struck down barriers to black enfranchisement In 1966 the Chicago Open Housing Movement followed by the passage of the 1968 Fair Housing Act was a capstone to more than a decade of major legislation during the civil rights movement citation needed By this time African Americans who questioned the effectiveness of nonviolent protest had gained a greater voice More militant Black leaders such as Malcolm X of the Nation of Islam and Eldridge Cleaver of the Black Panther Party called for Black people to defend themselves using violence if necessary From the mid 1960s to the mid 1970s the Black Power movement urged African Americans to look to Africa for inspiration and emphasized Black solidarity rather than integration citation needed Post civil rights era editMain article Post Civil Rights era in African American history Further information Black flight New Great Migration and Black Lives Matter This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources African American history news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp The first African American President of the United States Barack ObamaPolitically and economically Black people have made substantial strides in the post civil rights era Civil rights leader Jesse Jackson who ran for the Democratic Party s presidential nomination in 1984 and 1988 brought unprecedented support and leverage to Black people in politics 217 In 1989 Douglas Wilder became the first African American elected governor in U S history In 1992 Carol Moseley Braun of Illinois became the first Black woman elected to the U S Senate There were 8 936 Black officeholders in the United States in 2000 showing a net increase of 7 467 since 1970 In 2001 there were 484 Black mayors 218 The 39 African American members of Congress form the Congressional Black Caucus which serves as a political bloc for issues relating to African Americans The appointment of Black people to high federal offices including General Colin Powell Chairman of the U S Armed Forces Joint Chiefs of Staff 1989 93 United States Secretary of State 2001 05 Condoleezza Rice Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs 2001 04 Secretary of State in 2005 09 Ron Brown United States Secretary of Commerce 1993 96 and Supreme Court justices Thurgood Marshall and Clarence Thomas also demonstrates the increasing visibility of Black people in the political arena 219 Economic progress for Black people reaching the extremes of wealth has been slow According to Forbes richest lists Oprah Winfrey was the richest African American of the 20th century and has been the world s only Black billionaire in 2004 2005 and 2006 220 Not only was Winfrey the world s only Black billionaire but she has been the only Black person on the Forbes 400 list nearly every year since 1995 BET founder Bob Johnson briefly joined her on the list from 2001 to 2003 before his ex wife acquired part of his fortune although he returned to the list in 2006 he did not make it in 2007 With Winfrey the only African American wealthy enough to rank among America s 400 richest people 221 African Americans currently comprise 0 25 of America s economic elite and comprise 13 6 of the U S population 222 The dramatic political breakthrough came in the 2008 election with the election of Barack Obama the son of a Black Kenyan father and a white American mother He won overwhelming support from African American voters in the Democratic primaries even as his main opponent Hillary Clinton had the support of many Black politicians African Americans continued to support Obama throughout his term 223 After completing his first term Obama ran for a second term In 2012 he won the presidential election against candidate Mitt Romney and was re elected as the president of the United States The post civil rights era is also notable for the New Great Migration in which millions of African Americans have returned to the South including Texas Georgia Florida and North Carolina often to pursue increased economic opportunities in now desegregated southern cities citation needed On August 11 2020 Senator Kamala Harris D CA was announced as the first African American woman to run for vice president on a major party presidential ticket 224 She was elected vice president in the 2020 United States presidential election Social issues edit After the civil rights movement gains of the 1950s 1970s due to government neglect unfavorable social policies high poverty rates changes implemented in the criminal justice system and laws and a breakdown in traditional family units African American communities have been suffering from extremely high incarceration rates African Americans have the highest imprisonment rate of any major ethnic group in the world 225 The Southern states which historically had been involved in slavery and post Reconstruction oppression now produce the highest rates of incarceration and death penalty application 226 227 Historiography editThe history of slavery in the United States has always been a major research topic among white scholars but until the 1950s they generally focused on the political and constitutional themes of slavery which were debated over by white politicians they did not study the lives of the enslaved black people During Reconstruction and the late 19th century Black people became major actors in the South The Dunning School of white scholars generally cast Black people as pawns of white Carpetbaggers during this period but W E B Du Bois a Black historian and Ulrich B Phillips a white historian studied the African American experience in depth Du Bois study of Reconstruction provided a more objective context for evaluating its achievements and weaknesses Additionally he conducted studies of contemporary Black life Phillips set the main topics of inquiry that still guide the analysis of slave economics citation needed During the first half of the 20th century Carter G Woodson was the major Black scholar who studied and promoted the Black historical experience Woodson insisted that the scholarly study of the African American experience should be sound creative restorative and most important it should be directly relevant to the Black community He popularized Black history with a variety of innovative strategies including the founding of the Association for the Study of Negro Life the development of outreach activities the creation of Negro History Week now Black History Month in February and the publication of a popular Black history magazine Woodson democratized legitimized and popularized Black history 228 Benjamin Quarles 1904 1996 had a significant impact on the teaching of African American history Quarles and John Hope Franklin provided a bridge between the work of historians in historically Black colleges such as Woodson and the Black history that is now well established in mainline universities Quarles grew up in Boston attended Shaw University as an undergraduate and received a graduate degree at the University of Wisconsin In 1953 he began teaching at Morgan State College in Baltimore where he stayed despite the fact that he received a lucrative offer from Johns Hopkins University Quarles books included The Negro in the Civil War 1953 The Negro in the American Revolution 1961 Lincoln and the Negro 1962 The Negro in the Making of America 1964 updated 1987 and Black Abolitionists 1969 which are all narrative accounts of critical wartime episodes that focused on how Black people interacted with their white allies 229 Black historians attempted to reverse centuries of ignorance While they were not alone in advocating a new examination of slavery and racism in the United States the study of African American history has frequently been a political and scholarly struggle which has been waged by historians who wish to refute incorrect assumptions One of the foremost assumptions was the belief that enslaved people did not rebel because they were passive A series of historians transformed the image of African Americans revealing that they had a much richer and a more complex experience Historians such as Leon F Litwack documented how former enslaved people fought to keep their families together and he also documented that they struggled against tremendous odds in order to define themselves as free people Other historians wrote about rebellions both small and large In the 21st century Black history is considered mainstream Since it was recognized by President Gerald Ford in 1976 Black History Month is celebrated in the United States every year during the month of February Proponents of Black history believe that it promotes diversity develops self esteem and corrects myths and stereotypes Opponents of it argue that such curricula are dishonest divisive and lack academic credibility and rigor 230 In 2021 College Board announced that it will pilot an AP African American Studies course between 2022 and 2024 The course is expected to be launched in 2024 231 The goal of the course is to expand student understanding of black history culture art literature and academics 232 Knowledge of Black history edit Surveys of 11th and 12th grade students and adults in 2005 show that American schools have given students an awareness of some famous figures in Black history Both groups were asked to name 10 famous Americans excluding presidents Of those named the three most mentioned were Black 67 named Martin Luther King Jr 60 Rosa Parks and 44 Harriet Tubman Among adults King was second at 36 and Parks was tied for fourth with 30 while Tubman tied for 10th place with Henry Ford at 16 When distinguished historians were asked in 2006 to name the most prominent Americans Parks and Tubman did not make the top 100 233 Scholars of African American history edit Herbert Aptheker Lerone Bennett Jr Ira Berlin John Wesley Blassingame John Henrik Clarke W E B Du Bois Lonnie Bunch Eric Foner John Hope Franklin Henry Louis Gates Jr Eugene Genovese Annette Gordon Reed Lorenzo Greene Herbert Gutman Steven Hahn Vincent Harding Asa Grant Hilliard III Nikole Hannah Jones William Loren Katz Peter Kolchin Barbara Krauthamer Brent Leggs David Levering Lewis Leon F Litwack Rayford Logan Manning Marable Gwendolyn Midlo Hall Zora Neale Hurston Nell Irvin Painter Benjamin Quarles Cedric Robinson Joel Augustus Rogers Mark S Weiner Charles H Wesley Isabel Wilkerson Carter G WoodsonSee also edit nbsp United States portal nbsp Africa portal nbsp History portal nbsp Civil rights movement portalAfrican American culture African American founding fathers of the United States Black Belt in the American South American Descendants of Slavery Black History Month Black school Timeline of African American history Destination Freedom 1948 1949 radio dramas that retell African American history many written by Richard Durham Military history of African Americans Military history of African Americans in the Vietnam War National Museum of African American History and Culture African American Heritage Sites African American history of agriculture in the United States African American Historic Places List of monuments to African Americans Black genocide the notion that African Americans have been subjected to genocide List of expulsions of African Americans Lynching in the United States Mass racial violence in the United States Race and ethnicity in the United States Historical racial and ethnic demographics of the United States Racial segregation in the United States Racial segregation of churches in the United States Racism against African Americans Racism in the United States Slavery in the United States List of museums focused on African Americans African diaspora Plantation complexes in the Southern United States List of plantations in the United States African American culture Black church Religion of Black Americans Culture of the United States Culture of the Southern United States History of the Southern United States Politics of the Southern United States Society of the United States Impact of the COVID 19 pandemic on African American communities African American Lives Association for the Study of African American Life and History Legacy Museum of African American History Texas African American History Memorial African American Military History Museum International African American Museum Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia African American veterans lynched after World War I White nationalism White supremacyRegional histories edit History of slavery in Alabama History of slavery in Florida History of slavery in Georgia U S state History of slavery in Kentucky History of slavery in Maryland History of slavery in New York state History of slavery in Virginia History of slavery in Texas History of slavery in West Virginia History of slavery in Missouri History of slavery in Louisiana History of slavery in North Carolina History of slavery in South Carolina History of slavery in Tennessee History of slavery in DelawareCivil rights movement edit Civil rights movement 1865 1896 Civil rights movement 1896 1954 Civil rights movement Civil rights movement in popular culture History of civil rights in the United States Timeline of the civil rights movement 19th century African American civil rights activists List of civil rights leaders List of photographers of the civil rights movement Plantation house Post civil rights era in African American historyBy state This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items September 2020 African Americans in Alabama Black Belt region of Alabama African Americans in Arkansas African Americans in Florida African Americans in Georgia History of African Americans in Kansas History of African Americans in Kentucky List of Kentucky women in the civil rights era African Americans in Louisiana African Americans in Maryland African Americans in Mississippi African American history of Nebraska African Americans in New Jersey African Americans in New York African Americans in North Carolina African Americans in Oklahoma History of African Americans in Oregon African Americans in South Carolina South Carolina in the civil rights movement African Americans in Tennessee African Americans in Texas African Americans in Utah African Americans in Virginia First Africans in VirginiaIn other regions African Americans in Atlanta African Americans in New York City African Americans in Omaha Nebraska Civil rights movement in Omaha Nebraska Black Belt region of Chicago Black history in Puerto Rico History of African Americans in Boston History of African Americans in Chicago History of African Americans in Dallas Ft Worth History of African Americans in Detroit History of African Americans in Houston History of African Americans in Philadelphia History of African Americans in San Antonio African Americans in Davenport Iowa History of African Americans in Austin History of African Americans in Jacksonville Florida African Americans in Washington D C African Americans in Ghana African Americans in Israel African Americans in France History of African Americans in BaltimoreNotes edit Kauffman Miranda 2018 Black Tudors The Untold Story Oneworld Publications Gates Henry Louis 2014 How Many Slaves Landed in the US The Root Retrieved July 8 2018 Incredibly most of the 42 million members of the African American community descend from this tiny group of less than half a million Africans America s Black Holocaust Museum How Many Africans Were Really Taken to the U S During the Slave Trade abhmuseum org 6 January 2014 Retrieved 2018 09 05 Schneider Dorothy Schneider Carl J 2007 Slavery in America Infobase Publishing p 554 ISBN 978 1438108131 a b Kolchin Peter 2003 American Slavery 1619 1877 2nd ed New York Hill and Wang ISBN 978 0809016303 Bibko Julia 2016 The American Revolution and the Black Loyalist Exodus History A Journal of Student Research 1 1 Foner Eric 2010 The Fiery Trial Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery New York W W Norton amp Company Inc p 14 ISBN 978 0195137552 William J Cooper Jr and Thomas E Terrill 2008 The American South A History Rowman amp Littlefield p 363 ISBN 9780742563995 Leonard L Richards Slave Power The Free North and Southern Domination 1780 1860 2000 p 3 Bordewich Fergus M 2005 Bound for Canaan The Underground Railroad and the War for the Soul of America Harper Collins ISBN 0060524308 McPherson James M 1988 Battle Cry of Freedom The Civil War Era Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195038637 Fremon David 2000 The Jim Crow Laws and Racism in American History Enslow ISBN 0766012972 Lemann Nicholas 1991 The Promised Land The Great Black Migration and How It Changed America Vintage Press ISBN 0679733477 Finkelman Paul ed 2009 Encyclopedia of African American History 1896 to the Present 5 vol Oxford University Press ASIN 0195167791 Ellis Sylvia Freedom s Pragmatist Lyndon Johnson and Civil Rights U Press of Florida 2013 2020 Census Illuminates Racial and Ethnic Composition of the Country Solomon Salem February 17 2017 African Immigrant Population on Rise in US Voice of America Retrieved 26 February 2017 African Americans A new direction Britannica Westbury Susan 1985 Slaves of Colonial Virginia Where They Came From The William and Mary Quarterly 42 2 228 237 doi 10 2307 1920429 ISSN 0043 5597 JSTOR 1920429 a b c d e f Carson Clayborne Emma Lapsansky Werner and Gary Nash The Struggle for Freedom A History of African Americans New York Pearson Education Inc 2011 ISBN 978 0205832422 Perry James A African Roots of African American Culture The Black Collegian Online Archived from the original on March 5 2007 Retrieved June 4 2007 RACE The Power of an Illusion Go Deeper PBS 2003 Retrieved 2023 12 27 Gomez Zahkeem A Exchanging Our Country Marks The Transformation of African Identities in the Colonial and Antebellum South p 27 Chapel Hill 1998 Gomez Michael A Exchanging Our Country Marks The Transformation of African Identities in the Colonial and Antebellum South p 29 Chapel Hill 1998 a b c d e f g h i White Deborah Gray Bay Mia Martin Waldo E Jr 2013 Freedom on My Mind A History of African Americans Boston New York Bedford St Martin s p 27 ISBN 9780312648831 Clayborne Carson ed The Struggle For Freedom Prentice Hall 2011 38 Birzer D 2007 01 19 Esteban 1539 BlackPast org Retrieved 2022 05 17 African slaves arrive at Point Comfort Hampton VA African American Registry First enslaved Africans arrive in Jamestown setting the stage for slavery in North America HISTORY New World Exploration and English Ambition The Terrible Transformation PBS Archived from the original on June 14 2007 Retrieved June 14 2007 a b From Indentured Servitude to Racial Slavery The Terrible Transformation PBS Archived from the original on June 4 2007 Retrieved June 14 2007 Rodriguez Junius P 2007 Slavery in the United States A Social Political and Historical Encyclopedia ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1851095445 John Murrin Paul Johnson James McPherson Alice Fahs Gary Gerstle Expansion Immigration and Regional Differentiation in Liberty Equality Power A History of the American People Volume 1 To 1877 Cengage Learning 2011 p 108 How Slavery Affected African American Families Freedom s Story TeacherServe National Humanities Center nationalhumanitiescenter org Retrieved 2022 05 14 Egner Gruber Kate 4 January 2021 Slavery in Colonial America American Battlefield Trust Archived from the original on 2021 01 26 Retrieved 2021 11 16 Africans in America African Immigration and Relocation in U S History Classroom Materials at the Library of Congress Library of Congress Library of Congress Washington D C 20540 USA Retrieved 2022 05 14 Quirk Joel 2011 The Anti Slavery Project From the Slave Trade to Human Trafficking University of Pennsylvania Press p 344 ISBN 978 0812243338 Hacker J David 2020 From 20 and odd to 10 million The growth of the slave population in the United States Slavery amp Abolition 41 4 840 855 doi 10 1080 0144039x 2020 1755502 ISSN 0144 039X PMC 7716878 PMID 33281246 11 The Cotton Revolution THE AMERICAN YAWP Retrieved 2022 05 14 NPS Ethnography African American Heritage amp Ethnography Nps gov Retrieved 28 August 2017 Clotilde Slave ships blogspot co uk February 2 2011 Retrieved August 28 2017 Ira Berlin Many Thousands Gone The First Two Centuries of Slavery in North America 2000 Egerton Douglas R Slaves to the Marketplace Economic Liberty and Black Rebelliousness in the Atlantic World Journal of the Early Republic 26 no 4 Winter 2006 617 639 America History amp Life EBSCOhost accessed October 24 2012 Peter H Wood Black majority Negroes in colonial South Carolina from 1670 through the Stono Rebellion 1975 Michael Gomez Exchanging Our Country Marks The Transformation of African Identities in the Colonial and Antebellum South 1998 Michael Woods E What Twenty First Century Historians Have Said about the Causes of Disunion A Civil War Sesquicentennial Review of the Recent Literature paper presented at the Journal of American History 2012 Declarations of Independence 1770 1783 Revolution PBS Retrieved June 14 2007 Nash Gary B Summer 2006 African American Phi Kappa Phi Forum 83 3 1 2 Who Were the Loyalists learnquebec ca Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 28 August 2017 Nash Gary B Summer 2006 African American Phi Kappa Phi Forum 83 3 2 3 Thayer James Steel 1991 A Dissenting View of Creole Culture in Sierra Leone pp 215 230 https www persee fr doc cea 0008 0055 1991 num 31 121 2116 Browne Davies Nigel 2014 A Precis of Sources relating to genealogical research on the Sierra Leone Krio people Journal of Sierra Leone Studies Vol 3 Edition 1 2014 https www academia edu 40720522 A Precis of Sources relating to genealogical research on the Sierra Leone Krio people Walker James W 1992 Chapter Five Foundation of Sierra Leone The Black Loyalists The Search for a Promised Land in Nova Scotia and Sierra Leone 1783 1870 Toronto University of Toronto Press pp 94 114 ISBN 978 0802074027 originally published by Longman amp Dalhousie University Press 1976 Taylor Bankole Kamara February 2014 Sierra Leone The Land Its People and History New Africa Press p 68 ISBN 9789987160389 The Revolutionary War Revolution Archived from the original on June 10 2007 Retrieved 2007 06 15 a b The Constitution and the New Nation Revolution Retrieved June 15 2007 Peter Kolchin American Slavery 1619 1877 New York Hill and Wang paperback 1994 pp 78 79 Peter Kolchin American Slavery 1619 1877 New York Hill and Wang paperback 1994 p 78 Peter Kolchin American Slavery 1619 1877 New York Hill and Wang paperback 1994 pp 82 83 Bedini Silvio A 1999 The Life of Benjamin Banneker The First African American Man of Science 2nd ed Maryland Historical Society ISBN 978 0938420590 Albert J Raboteau Canaan Land A Religious History of African Americans 2001 James H Hutson Religion and the founding of the American Republic 1998 p 106 Albert J Raboteau Slave religion the invisible institution in the antebellum South 1978 online Edward Raymond Turner The Abolition of Slavery in Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 1912 129 142 in JSTOR Franklin W Knight The Haitian Revolution American Historical Review 2000 105 1 pp 103 115 in JSTOR Douglas R Egerton Slaves to the Marketplace Economic Liberty and Black Rebelliousness in the Atlantic World Journal of the Early Republic 26 no 4 Winter 2006 617 639 Carlander Jay Elliot Brownlee September 2006 Antebellum Southern Political Economists and the Problem of Slavery American Nineteenth Century History 7 3 393 doi 10 1080 14664650600956585 S2CID 145385967 Growth and Entrenchment of Slavery Brotherly Love PBS Retrieved June 16 2007 The Compromise of 1850 and the Fugitive Slave Act PBS Retrieved April 12 2012 Carson Clayborne Emma J Lapsansky Werner and Gary B Nash A Prelude to War The 1850s in The Struggle for Freedom A History of African Americans Boston Prentice Hall 2011 206 207 Kennicott Patrick C 1970 Black Persuaders in the Antislavery Movement Journal of Black Studies 1 1 5 20 doi 10 1177 002193477000100102 S2CID 143734647 Williamjames Hull Hoffer The Caning of Charles Sumner 2010 excerpt and text search Adam Rothman Slave Country American Expansion and the Origins of the Deep South 2005 Ira Berlin Many Thousands Gone The First Two Centuries of Slavery in North America 2000 32 Benjamin Quarles Black Abolitionists London Oxford University Press 1969 The number of free Blacks grew during this time as well By 1830 there were 319 000 free Blacks in the United States About 150 000 lived in the northern states Taylor Quintard 1979 The Emergence of Black communities in the Pacific Northwest 1865 1910 The Journal of Negro History 64 4 342 354 doi 10 2307 2716942 JSTOR 2716942 S2CID 132137921 a b c d e Carson Clayborne 2011 The Struggle for Freedom A History of African Americans Penguin academics 2 ed Boston Prentice Hall ISBN 9780205832408 Meyer Stephen Grant 2001 As long as they don t move next door segregation and racial conflict in American neighborhoods Lanham Md Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0847697014 Philadelphia Brotherly Love Retrieved June 17 2007 Hopkins Leroy T 1986 Bethel African Methodist Church in Lancaster Prolegomenon to a Social History Journal of the Lancaster County Historical Society 90 4 205 236 Rohrs Richard C August 2012 The Free Black Experience in Antebellum Wilmington North Carolina Refining Generalization about Race Relations Journal of Southern History 78 3 615 638 ISSN 0022 4642 The Black Church PBS Archived from the original on June 4 2007 Retrieved June 17 2007 Raboteau Albert J 2004 Slave religion the invisible institution in the antebellum South Updated ed Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195174137 Retrieved December 27 2008 Greene A Wilson 2006 Civil War Petersburg Confederate city in the crucible of war A nation divided Charlottesville University of Virginia Press p 8 ISBN 978 0813925707 Vega Caridad de la Rustin Quaide February 2008 National Register Nominations Pocahontas Island Historic District PDF Heritage Matters pp 6 7 Retrieved April 6 2013 Randall M Miller ed 2009 The New Nation Takes Shape 1789 1820 The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Daily Life in America The Greenwood Press Daily life through history series Vol 1 Westport Conn Greenwood Press pp 177 366 ISBN 9780313336997 Freedom and Resistance PBS Archived from the original on June 3 2007 Retrieved June 17 2007 a b Nash Gary B 1988 Forging freedom the formation of Philadelphia s Black community 1720 1840 Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press p 204 ISBN 978 0674309340 Nile s Weekly Register PDF stanford edu Archived from the original PDF on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 28 August 2017 The Works of thomas Jefferson PDF stanford edu Archived from the original PDF on March 5 2016 Retrieved August 28 2017 Ten days from today I left the plantation historylink101 com Retrieved 28 August 2017 Dred Scott s fight for freedom 1846 1857 PBS Retrieved June 12 2012 Don Fehrenbacher The Dred Scott Case Its Significance in American Law and Politics 2001 Dred Scott v Sandford Michael Vorenberg ed The Emancipation Proclamation A Brief History with Documents 2010 Hondon B Hargrove Black Union Soldiers in the Civil War 2003 Jim Downs Sick from Freedom African American Illness and Suffering during the Civil War and Reconstruction 2015 The Reconstruction Period an Overview Archived from the original on January 22 2013 Retrieved December 11 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Willis John C 2000 Forgotten Time The Yazoo Mississippi Delta after the Civil War Charlottesville University of Virginia ISBN 978 0813919713 a b Carson Clayborne Lapsansky Werner Emma J Nash Gary B 2011 The Struggle for Freedom A History of African Americans Boston Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0205832422 Fruits of Reconstruction Reconstruction and Its Aftermath Retrieved December 6 2012 Ross Dorothy September 2009 Lincoln and the Ethics of Emancipation Universalism Nationalism Exceptionalism Journal of American History 96 2 379 399 doi 10 1093 jahist 96 2 379 Archived from the original on 2012 04 21 Du Bois W E B The Souls of Black Folk Retrieved December 6 2012 Post Civil War History African Americans After Reconstruction Archived from the original on May 11 2013 Retrieved December 11 2012 Joel Williamson New People Miscegenation and Mulattoes in the United States New York 1980 79 80 December 2012 Williamjames Hull Hoffer Plessy v Ferguson race and inequality in Jim Crow America UP of Kansas 2012 Glen Schwendemann St Louis and the Exodusters of 1879 Journal of Negro History 46 1 1961 32 46 online Connie L Lester Disenfranchising Laws Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture accessed 17 April 2008 Richard H Pildes Democracy Anti Democracy and the Canon Constitutional Commentary Vol 17 2000 p 27 accessed March 10 2008 a b Richard H Pildes Democracy Anti Democracy and the Canon Constitutional Commentary Vol 17 2000 pp 12 13 accessed March 10 2008 Allen W Trelease White Terror The Ku Klux Klan Conspiracy and Southern Reconstruction 1995 Military Report on Colfax Riot 1875 from the Congressional Record accessed 6 April 2008 A state historical marker erected in 1950 noted that 150 blacks died and three whites Nicholas Lemann Redemption The Last Battle of the Civil War New York Farrar Straus amp Giroux 2007 pp 70 76 History Adeyemi College of Education Dept of 2008 Themes in humanities and African experience Dept of History Adeyemi College of Education For the story of the lynchings see Philip Dray At the Hands of Persons Unknown The Lynching of Black America New York Random House 2002 For the systematic oppression and terror inflicted see Leon F Litwack Trouble in Mind Black Southerners in the Age of Jim Crow New York 1998 Diamond Robert J Cottrol and Raymond T The Second Amendment Toward an Afro Americanist Reconsideration Guncite com Retrieved 28 August 2017 August Meier Booker T Washington and the Negro Press With Special Reference to the Colored American Magazine Journal of Negro History 1953 67 90 in JSTOR Robert Norrell Up From History the life of Booker T Washington Harvard University Press 2009 Rupert Vance The 20th century South as Viewed by English speaking Travelers 1900 1955 in Thomas D Clark ed Travels in the New South A Bibliography vol 2 1962 p 18 Steven A Reich ed The Great Black Migration A Historical Encyclopedia of the American Mosaic 2014 Nathan Irvin Huggins Harlem renaissance Oxford University Press 2007 Allan H Spear Black Chicago The making of a Negro ghetto 1890 1920 1967 E Franklin Frazier Black bourgeoisie The rise of a new middle class 1957 pp 53 59 135 137 Online free to borrow Juliet E K Walker Black Entrepreneurship An Historical Inquiry Business and Economic History 1983 37 55 online Archived 2016 11 05 at the Wayback Machine Lawrence Otis Graham Our kind of people Inside America s black upper class 2009 pp 1 18 63 65 Elijah Anderson The Social Situation of the Black Executive Black and White Identities in the Corporate World in Problem of the Century Racial Stratification in the United States in Elijah Anderson and Douglas S Massey ed Russell Sage Foundation 2001 Blaine J Branchik and Judy Foster Davis Black Gold A History of the African American Elite Market Segment Charm 2007 online Blain Roberts Pageants Parlors and Pretty Women Race and Beauty in the Twentieth Century South 2014 quote p 96 online review excerpt Susannah Walker Style and Status Selling Beauty to African American Women 1920 1975 2007 excerpt A Lelia Bundles On Her Own Ground The Life and Times of Madam C J Walker 2002 excerpt The Price of Freedom Printable Exhibition amhistory si edu Retrieved 2020 05 24 Commemorating the Great War World War I Centennial www worldwar1centennial org Retrieved 2020 05 24 Jordan John 2014 Born Black in the U S A Dorrance Publishing ISBN 978 1434914842 a b Red Hand Flag History Detectives Pbs org Retrieved 28 August 2017 My dear General the President delegated me to confer you the Distinguished Service Medal in the name of the United States government As Commander of the 157th French Division of Infantry you have been an important factor in the success of the allies by your valiant leadership and eminent tactical ability The officers and soldiers of the 371st and 372nd American Infantry Regiments count it a great honor to have served as part of your command in the operations conducted by you in Champagne and in the Vosges General John J Pershing quoted in Chester D Heywood Negro Combat Troops in the World War The Story of the 371st Infantry 1928 Chester D Heywood Negro Combat Troops in the World War The story of the 371 St Infantry Editeur Worcester Mass Commonwealth Press 1929 p 57 Mairie de Chateau Thierry base monument du 372e US regiment Emmet J Scott Scott Official History of the American Negro in the world war 1919 Rinaldi Richard A 2004 The US Army In World War I Orders Of Battle Tiger Lily Publications LLC ISBN 9780972029643 Total pages 244 Rinaldi p 98 District of Columbia National Guard Wikipedia article World War 1 Freddie Stowers Corporal United States Army Freddie Stowers Corporal United States Army Joe W Trotter Reflections on the Great Migration to Western Pennsylvania Western Pennsylvania History 1995 78 4 153 158 online Joe W Trotter and Eric Ledell Smith eds African Americans in Pennsylvania Shifting Historical Perspectives Penn State Press 2010 Trotter Reflections on the Great Migration to Western Pennsylvania p 154 Jam Voogd Race Riots amp Resistance The Red Summer of 1919 Peter Lang 2008 David F Krugler 1919 The Year of Racial Violence Cambridge UP 2014 Trotter Reflections on the Great Migration to Western Pennsylvania pp 156 157 Kennedy David Freedom From Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 18 Kennedy David Freedom From Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 87 a b Kennedy David Freedom From Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 193 Kennedy David Freedom From Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 208 Roger Biles A New Deal for the American People 1991 pp 172 193 Christopher G Wye The New Deal and the Negro community Toward a broader conceptualization The Journal of American History 59 3 1972 621 639 in JSTOR Raymond Wolters The New Deal and the Negro in John Braeman ed The New Deal The National Level 1975 1 170 217 Kruman Mark S 1975 Quotas for Blacks The Public Works Administration and the Black Construction Worker Labor History 16 1 37 51 doi 10 1080 00236567508584321 Kennedy Freedom From Fear p 212 Kennedy David Freedom From Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 213 Harvard Sitkoff A New Deal for Blacks The Emergence of Civil Rights as a National Issue The Depression Decade 1978 ch 3 4 excerpt and text search Karen Ferguson Black Politics in New Deal Atlanta 2001 a b c Kennedy David Freedom From Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 378 Kennedy David Freedom From Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 194 Kennedy David Freedom From Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 164 Christopher Robert Reed Black Chicago Political Realignment during the Great Depression and New Deal Illinois Historical Journal 1985 78 4 pp 242 256 in JSTOR Conrad Black 2005 Franklin Delano Roosevelt Champion Of Freedom PublicAffairs pp 437 438 ISBN 9781586482824 a b Kennedy David Freedom From Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 341 Kennedy David Freedom From Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 285 John Bubbles The Dancer Is Dead at 84 The New York Times 20 May 1986 Kennedy David Freedom From Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 342 Kennedy David Freedom From Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 pp 342 343 a b c Kennedy David Freedom From Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 343 Kennedy David Freedom From Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 pp 344 346 Kennedy David Freedom From Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 pp 345 346 Kennedy David Freedom From Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 347 Kennedy David Freedom From Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 pp 348 349 a b Kennedy David Freedom From Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 764 Kennedy David Freedom From Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 764 amp 766 a b c Kennedy David Freedom From Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 766 a b Kennedy David Freedom From Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 767 Anthony J Badger The New Deal 1989 pp 147 189 Fred C Frey and T Lynn Smith The Influence of the AAA Cotton Program Upon the Tenant Cropper and Laborer Rural Sociology 1936 1 4 pp 483 505 at pp 501 503 online a b c d e f g h Kennedy David Freedom from Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 768 Neil A Wynn African American Experience During World War II 2011 pp 43 62 Ulysses Lee The Employment of Negro Troops Vol 8 The United States Army in World War II 1966 Sandra Bolzenius Asserting Citizenship Black Women in the Women s Army Corps wac International Journal of Military History and Historiography 39 2 2019 208 231 Kennedy David Freedom from Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 pp 771 772 a b c d e f Kennedy David Freedom from Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 772 Kennedy David Freedom from Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 710 Kennedy David Freedom from Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 711 a b c d Kennedy David Freedom from Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 771 a b c d e f g h Kennedy David Freedom from Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 770 a b c Kennedy David Freedom from Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 773 Kennedy David Freedom from Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 pp 773 774 a b c Kennedy David Freedom from Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 774 Kennedy David Freedom from Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 pp 772 773 Williams Rudi African Americans Gain Fame as World War II Red Ball Express Drivers American Armed Forces Press Service February 15 2002 Retrieved 2007 06 10 Micheal Clodfelter Seven African Americans were awarded for their work in the war Their names were First Lieutenant Vernon J Baker Staff Sergeant Edward A Carter Jr First Lieutenant John R Fox Private First Class Willy F James Jr Staff Sergeant Ruben Rivers Captain Charles L Thomas and Private George Watson Warfare and Armed Conflicts A Statistical Reference to Casualty and Other Figures 1500 2000 2nd end 2002 ISBN 0786412046 Alan L Gropman Air Force Integrates 1949 64 1986 Morris J MacGregor Jr Integration of the Armed Forces 1940 1965 Washington 1981 Kennedy David Freedom from Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 pp 775 776 a b c d e f Kennedy David Freedom from Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 775 Wynn African American Experience During World War II 2011 pp 25 42 63 80 David M Kennedy Freedom from Fear The American People in Depression and War 1929 1945 2001 Lee Finkle The Conservative Aims of Militant Rhetoric Black Protest during World War II Journal of American History December 1973 Vol 60 Issue 3 pp 692 713 in JSTOR Kennedy David Freedom from Fear Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 pp 762 763 Maureen Honey Bitter Fruit African American Women in World War II 1999 Taylor Shockley Megan 2003 Working For Democracy Working Class African American Women Citizenship and Civil Rights in Detroit 1940 1954 Michigan Historical Review 29 2 125 157 doi 10 2307 20174036 JSTOR 20174036 D Ann Campbell Women at War with America 1984 pp 128 129 Daniel Kryder Divided Arsenal Race and the American State During World War II 2000 pp 113 129 Frank N Magill ed Great Events from History II Arts and Culture Series volume 3 1937 1954 1993 pp 1159 1163 Donald Bogle Bright Boulevards Bold Dreams The Story of Black Hollywood 2009 ch 4 a b c d In Motion African American Migration Experience The Second Great Migration Archived from the original on April 16 2007 Retrieved March 18 2007 Rutkoff Peter M and William B Scott Fly Away The Great African American Cultural Migrations Johns Hopkins UP 2010 Stewart E Tolnay The great migration and changes in the northern black family 1940 to 1990 Social Forces 75 4 1997 1213 1238 online Mercy Seat Films THEY CLOSED OUR SCHOOLS Film Credits Mercyseatfilms com Retrieved 28 August 2017 Jordan John 9 June 2014 Born Black in the U S A Dorrance Publishing ISBN 978 1434914842 African American Politicians www myblackhistory net Retrieved 2022 05 17 African American Members of the U S Congress 1870 2020 Congressional Research Service Retrieved 2022 05 17 Roy Douglas Malonson Condi and Oprah aren t good role models for Black motherhood Archived 2006 05 20 at the Wayback Machine African American News amp Issues Publisher s Analysis Retrieved 19 September 2013 Yahoo Finance Stock Market Live Quotes Business amp Finance News finance yahoo com QuickFacts United States Shayla C Nunnally African American Perspectives on the Obama Presidency in William Crotty ed The Obama Presidency Promise and Performance 2012 pp 127 150 Glueck Katie Burns Alexander 11 August 2020 Kamala Harris Is Biden s Choice for Vice President The New York Times Retrieved 12 August 2020 Pettit Becky 2004 Mass imprisonment and the life course Race and class inequality in US incarceration American Sociological Review 69 2 151 169 doi 10 1177 000312240406900201 S2CID 14332898 One in 100 Behind Bars in America 2008 PDF Pew Research Center Archived from the original PDF on 2009 03 27 Retrieved 28 August 2017 One in 31 The Long Reach of American Corrections Archived 2009 05 13 at the Wayback Machine Pew Research Center released March 2 2009 Pero Gaglo Dagbovie Making Black History Practical and Popular Carter G Woodson the Proto Black Studies Movement and the Struggle for Black Liberation Western Journal of Black Studies 2004 28 2 372 383 ISSN 0197 4327 Fulltext Ebsco Meier August Benjamin Quarles and the Historiography of Black America Civil War History June 1980 Vol 26 No 2 pp 101 116 Abul Pitre and Ruth Ray The Controversy Around Black History Western Journal of Black Studies 2002 26 3 149 154 ISSN 0197 4327 Fulltext Ebsco Waters Brandi February 2022 Teacher Information Guide AP African American Studies Pilot Washington DC College Board Soderstrom Daniel The Birth of Black Studies Retrieved September 10 2022 Sam Wineburg and Chauncey Monte Sano Famous Americans The Changing Pantheon of American Heroes Journal of American History March 2008 94 4 pp 1186 1202 Further reading edit nbsp Reference books edit Brown Nikki L M and Barry M Stentiford eds The Jim Crow Encyclopedia Greenwood 2008 online Earle Jonathan and Malcolm Swanston The Routledge Atlas of African American History 2000 excerpt and text search Finkelman Paul ed Encyclopedia of African American History 1619 1895 From the Colonial Period to the Age of Frederick Douglass 3 vols 2006 Finkelman Paul ed Encyclopedia of African American History 1896 to the Present From the Age of Segregation to the Twenty first Century 5 vols 2009 excerpt and text search Hine Darlene Clark Rosalyn Terborg Penn and Elsa Barkley Brown eds Black Women in America An Historical Encyclopedia 2005 excerpt and text search Loewenberg Bert James and Ruth Bogin Black Women in Nineteenth Century American Life Their Words Their Thoughts Their Feelings Pennsylvania State UP 1976 Lowery Charles D and John F Marszalek eds Encyclopedia of African American Civil Rights From Emancipation to the Present 1992 online edition Palmer Colin A ed Encyclopedia Of African American Culture And History The Black Experience In The Americas 6 vols 2005 Richardson Christopher M Ralph E Luker eds 2014 Historical Dictionary of the Civil Rights Movement 2nd ed Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 9780810880375 Salzman Jack David Lionel Smith and Cornel West eds Encyclopedia of African American Culture and History 5 vols 1996 Smallwood Arwin D The Atlas of African American History and Politics From the Slave Trade to Modern Times 1997 Surveys edit Main article Bibliography of slavery in the United States Bennett Lerone Before the Mayflower A History of Black America 1619 1962 2018 classic survey ASIN B08SCBR8WY Franklin John Hope and Alfred Moss From Slavery to Freedom A History of African Americans 2001 standard textbook first edition in 1947 excerpt and text search Harris William H The Harder We Run Black Workers Since the Civil War 1982 online edition Hine Darlene Clark et al The African American Odyssey 2 vols 4th edn 2007 textbook excerpt and text search vol 1 Holt Thomas C ed Major Problems in African American History From Freedom to Freedom Now 1865 1990s 2000 reader in primary and secondary sources Holt Thomas C Children of Fire A History of African Americans Hill amp Wang 2010 438 pp Kelley Robin D G and Earl Lewis eds To Make Our World Anew A History of African Americans 2000 672pp 10 long essays by leading scholars online edition Kendi Ibram X and Keisha N Blain eds Four Hundred Souls A Community History of African America 1619 2019 One World 2021 528pp anthology of 80 essays Litwack Leon and August Meier Black Leaders of the 19th Century 1988 Franklin John Hope and August Meier eds Black Leaders of the Twentieth Century 1982 short biographies by scholars Mandle Jay R Not Slave Not Free The African American Economic Experience since the Civil War 1992 online edition Nash Gary B The African Americans Revolution in The Oxford Handbook of the American Revolution ed by Jane Kamensky and Edward G Gray 2012 online at DOI 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199746705 013 0015 Painter Nell Irvin Creating Black Americans African American History and Its Meanings 1619 to the Present 2006 480 pp Pinn Anthony B The African American Religious Experience in America 2007 excerpt and text search Tuck Stephen We Ain t What We Ought To Be The Black Freedom Struggle from Emancipation to Obama 2011 Weiner Mark S Black Trials Citizenship from the Beginnings of Slavery to the End of Caste 2004 Since 1914 edit Allen Walter R et al From Bakke to Fisher African American Students in US Higher Education over Forty Years RSF The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences 4 6 2018 41 72 online Breen William J Black Women and the Great War Mobilization and Reform in the South Journal of Southern History 44 3 1978 pp 421 440 online World War I Finley Randy Black Arkansans and World War One Arkansas Historical Quarterly 49 3 1990 249 77 doi 10 2307 40030800 Graham Hugh Davis The Civil Rights Era Origins and Development of National Policy 1960 1972 1990 Hemmingway Theodore Prelude to Change Black Carolinians in the War Years 1914 1920 Journal of Negro History 65 3 1980 pp 212 227 online Patler Nicholas Jim Crow and the Wilson administration protesting federal segregation in the early twentieth century 2007 Patterson James T Grand Expectations The United States 1945 1974 Oxford History of the United States 1997 Patterson James T Restless Giant The United States from Watergate to Bush v Gore Oxford History of the United States 2007 Scheiber Jane Lang and Harry N Scheiber The Wilson administration and the wartime mobilization of black Americans 1917 18 Labor History 10 3 1969 433 458 Wynn Neil A African American Experience During World War II 2011 Yellin Eric S 2013 Racism in the Nation s Service doi 10 5149 9781469607214 Yellin ISBN 9781469607207 S2CID 153118305 Activism and urban culture edit Further information Civil rights movement Further reading Bernstein Shana Bridges of Reform Interracial Civil Rights Activism in Twentieth Century Los Angeles Oxford University Press 2010 Black Jr Timuel D Bridges of Memory Chicago s First Wave of Black Migration An Oral History 2005 ISBN 081012315 0 Boyd Herb ed The Harlem Reader A Celebration of New York s Most Famous Neighborhood from the Renaissance Years to the 21st Century 2003 primary sources Branch Taylor Parting the Waters America in the King Years 1954 1963 1988 Pillar of Fire America in the King Years 1963 1965 1998 At Canaan s Edge America in the King Years 1965 1968 2006 Carle Susan D Defining the Struggle National Racial Justice Organizing 1880 1915 Oxford University Press 2013 Cash Floris Loretta Barnett African American Women and Social Action The Clubwomen and Volunteerism from Jim Crow to the New Deal 1896 1936 Praeger 2001 Garrow David Bearing the Cross Martin Luther King Jr and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference 1999 Gasman Marybeth and Roger L Geiger Higher Education for African Americans before the Civil Rights Era 1900 1964 2012 Grossman James R Land of Hope Chicago Black Southerners and the Great Migration 1991 Hornsby Alton Black Power in Dixie A Political History of African Americans in Atlanta 2009 Hunt Darnell and Ana Christina Ramon eds Black Los Angeles American Dreams and Racial Realities 2010 Kusmer Kenneth L and Joe W Trotter eds African American Urban History since World War II 2009 Moore Shirley Ann Wilson To Place Our Deeds The African American Community in Richmond California 19101963 2000 Osofsky Gilbert Harlem The Making of a Ghetto Negro New York 1890 1930 1966 Orser W Edward Secondhand Suburbs Black Pioneers in Baltimore s Edmondson Village 1955 1980 Journal of Urban History 10 no 3 May 1990 227 62 Pattillo McCoy Mary Black Pickett Fences Privilege and Peril among the Black Middle Class 1999 Player Tiffany Angel The Anti lynching Crusaders A Study of Black Women s Activism PhD dissertation University of Georgia 2008 online Rabaka Reiland Hip Hop s Amnesia From Blues and the Black Women s Club Movement to Rap and the Hip Hop Movement Lexington Books 2012 Self Robert O American Babylon Race and the Struggle for Postwar Oakland 2003 Spear Allan H Black Chicago The Making of a Negro Ghetto 1890 1920 1969 Sugrue Thomas J Sweet Land of Liberty The Forgotten Struggle for Civil Rights in the North 2008 720pp comprehensive history of civil rights issue in the North 1930s 2000s online Sugrue Thomas J The Origins of the Urban Crisis Race and Inequality in Postwar Detroit 1996 online Thomas Richard Walter Life for Us Is What We Make It Building Black Community in Detroit 1915 1945 1992 Washburn Patrick S The African American Newspaper Voice of Freedom Northwestern University Press 2006 Wiese Andrew Places of Their Own African American Suburbanization in the Twentieth Century 2004 Wiese Andrew Black Housing White Finance African American Housing and Home Ownership in Evanston Illinois before 1940 Journal of Social History 33 no 2 Winter 1999 429 60 Wiese Andrew Places of Our Own Suburban Black Towns before 1960 Journal of Urban History 19 no 3 1993 30 54 Williams Doretha Kansas Grows the Best Wheat and the Best Race Women Black Women s Club Movement in Kansas 1900 30 2011 online Wilson William H Hamilton Park A Planned Black Community in Dallas 1998 Historiography and teaching edit Arnesen Eric Up From Exclusion Black and White Workers Race and the State of Labor History Reviews in American History 26 1 March 1998 pp 146 174 in Project MUSE Dagbovie Pero Gaglo African American History Reconsidered 2010 255 pages excerpt and text search Dagbovie Pero The Early Black History Movement Carter G Woodson and Lorenzo Johnston Greene 2007 excerpt and text search Dagbovie Pero Gaglo Exploring a Century of Historical Scholarship on Booker T Washington Journal of African American History 2007 92 2 239 264 ISSN 1548 1867 Fulltext Ebsco Dorsey Allison Black History Is American History Teaching African American History in the Twenty first Century Journal of American History 2007 93 4 1171 1177 ISSN 0021 8723 Fulltext History Cooperative Ernest John Liberation Historiography African American Historians before the Civil War American Literary History 14 3 Fall 2002 pp 413 443 in Project MUSE Eyerman Ron Cultural Trauma Slavery and the Formation of African American Identity 2002 argues that slavery emerged as a central element of the collective identity of African Americans in the post Reconstruction era Fields Barbara J Ideology and Race in American History in J Morgan Kousser and James M McPherson eds Region Race and Reconstruction Essays in Honor of C Vann Woodward 1982 Franklin John Hope Afro American History State of the Art Journal of American History June 1988 163 173 in JSTOR Goggin Jacqueline Carter G Woodson A Life in Black History 1993 Hall Stephen Gilroy To Give a Faithful Account of the Race History and Historical Consciousness in the African American Community 1827 1915 PhD dissertation Ohio State University 1999 470 pp DAI 2000 60 8 3084 A DA9941339 Fulltext ProQuest Dissertations amp Theses Harris Robert L 1982 Coming of Age The Transformation of Afro American Historiography PDF Journal of Negro History 57 2 107 121 doi 10 2307 2717569 JSTOR 2717569 S2CID 149836969 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 12 21 Retrieved 2017 06 01 Harris Robert L Jr The Flowering of Afro American History American Historical Review 1987 92 5 1150 1161 ISSN 0002 8762 in Jstor Higginbotham Evelyn Brooks 1992 African American Women s History and the Metalanguage of Race Signs Journal of Women in Culture and Society 17 2 251 274 doi 10 1086 494730 S2CID 144201941 Hine Darlene Clark 2007 African American Women and Their Communities in the Twentieth Century The Foundation and Future of Black Women s Studies Black Women Gender amp Families 1 1 1 23 JSTOR 10 5406 blacwomegendfami 1 1 0001 Hine Darlene Clark ed Afro American History Past Present and Future 1980 Hine Darlene Clark Hine Sight Black Women and the Re Construction of American History 1999 excerpt and text search Hornsby Jr Alton et al eds A Companion to African American History 2005 580 pp 31 long essays by experts covering African and diasporic connections in the context of the transatlantic slave trade colonial and antebellum African European and indigenous relations processes of cultural exchange war and emancipation post emancipation community and institution building intersections of class and gender migration and struggles for civil rights ISBN 0631230661 McMillen Neil R Up from Jim Crow Black History Enters the Profession s Mainstream Reviews in American History 1987 15 4 543 549 ISSN 0048 7511 in Jstor Meier August and Elliott Rudwick Black History and the Historical Profession 1915 1980 1986 Nelson Hasker Listening For Our Past A Lay Guide To African American Oral History Interviewing 2000 excerpt and text search Quarles Benjamin Black Mosaic Essays in Afro American History and Historiography 1988 Rabinowitz Howard N More Than the Woodward Thesis Assessing The Strange Career of Jim Crow Journal of American History 75 December 1988 842 56 in JSTOR Reidy Joseph P Slave Emancipation Through the Prism of Archives Records 1997 online Roper John Herbert U B Phillips A Southern Mind 1984 on the white historian of slavery Strickland Arvarh E and Robert E Weems eds The African American Experience An Historiographical and Bibliographical Guide Greenwood 2001 442pp 17 topical chapters by experts Trotter Joe W African American History Origins Development and Current State of the Field OAH Magazine of History 7 4 Summer 1993 online edition Wright William D Black History and Black Identity A Call for a New Historiography 2002 proposes new racial and ethnic terminology and classifications for the study of black people and history excerpt and text search Yacovone Donald April 8 2018 Textbook Racism How scholars sustained white supremacy Chronicle of Higher Education Retrieved April 18 2018 Primary sources edit Aptheker Herbert ed A Documentary History of the Negro People in the United States 7 vols 1951 1994 Baker Ray Stannard Following the Color Line An Account of Negro Citizenship in the American Democracy 1908 online Berlin Ira ed Free at Last A Documentary History of Slavery Freedom and the Civil War 1995 Bracey John H and Manisha Sinha eds African American Mosaic A Documentary History from the Slave Trade to the Twenty First Century 2 vols 2004 Bureau of Education Department of the Interior Negro Education A Study of the Private and Higher Schools for Colored People in the United States Volume II Bulletin 1916 No 39 1917 online Chafe William Henry Raymond Gavins and Robert Korstad eds Remembering Jim Crow African Americans Tell About Life in the Segregated South 2003 excerpt and text search Finkenbine Roy E Sources of the African American Past Primary Sources in American History 2nd edn 2003 Hampton Henry and Steve Fayer eds Voices of Freedom 1990 oral histories of civil rights movement Hart Albert Bushnell 1910 The Southern South D Appleton ISBN 9780837118901 by a white Harvard professor focus on race relations King Jr Martin Luther I Have a Dream Writings and Speeches That Changed the World 1992 excerpt and text search King Jr Martin Luther Why We Can t Wait 1963 1964 2000 King Jr Martin Luther The Papers of Martin Luther King Jr Volume VI Advocate of the Social Gospel September 1948 March 1963 2007 excerpt and text search Levy Peter B Let Freedom Ring A Documentary History of the Modern Civil Rights Movement 1992 online edition Rawick George P ed The American Slave A Composite Autobiography 19 vols 1972 oral histories with ex slaves conducted in the 1930s by Works Progress Administration Sernett Milton C African American Religious History A Documentary Witness 1999 excerpt and text search Wright Kai ed The African American Archive The History of the Black Experience Through Documents 2001 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has the text of a 1905 New International Encyclopedia article about African American history nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to African American history nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to African American history African American History Channel African American History Channel Africans in America PBS 4 Part Series 2007 Living Black History How Reimagining the African American Past Can Remake America s Racial Future by Manning Marable 2006 Library of Congress African American History and Culture Library of Congress African American Odyssey Center for Contemporary Black History at Columbia University Encyclopaedia Britannica Guide to Black History Black People in History Comparative status of African Americans in Canada in the 1800s Historical resources related to African American history provided free for public use by the State Archives of Florida Randolph Linsly Simpson African American Collection Photographs of African American life and racial attitudes 1850 1940 from the collection of the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Yale University Black History Milestones African American Place of Origin Genealogy FamilySearch Wiki Familysearch org Retrieved October 25 2017 Pioneering African American oral history video excerpts at The National Visionary Leadership Project African American history connection Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title African American history amp oldid 1207397280, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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