Racial Discrimination During The Reconstruction Era

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Pages: 1

Segregation is the separation of humans into ethnic or racial groups in daily life. After the 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution abolished slavery in America, racial discrimination became regulated by the Jim-Crow laws, mandating strict segregation of the two races (whites and blacks) in public settings, such as buses, restaurants, restrooms, water fountains, train stations, schools, etc. After much fighting and conflict, this segregation formally came to an end during American Reconstruction. This meant that whites and blacks (and other races of people as well, since there was a large rate of immigration into the country from that time onwards) attended all events with equal rights to be there.