Racism And Jim Crow Laws

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The set of laws known as Jim Crow Laws were created in 1877 and were abolished in 1954. Jim crow laws was the name of any law that enforced racial segregation in the south. They were named this and used frequently around the end of the 1877 reconstruction and the beginning of the civil rights movement in the 1950s. I´m doing this subject because I am interested to learn about what all these separate laws did and how it affected racism and groups that were already involved in racism. The origins of this name was from Jump Jim Crow which was a minstrel routine. Which soon became the name for segregated life and segregation laws during this time. Jim Crow laws were published in the late 1880´s due to Southern states legislatures not being controlled …show more content…
This seemed like a good solution based on public transportation but even though they were to be considered ¨equal¨ a lot of times the conditions for the coloured areas were not in as good shape as the areas for whites as well as how crowded the areas were depending on if it was a theater public restroom or anything like that the conditions and density due to the sheer amount of people were not in an equal state. This is what had an impact on earlier cases before Jim Crow Laws even came into existence due to the fact that certain facility ¨standards¨ were being questioned by the public who had to use these certain features in their day to day life. A case that has to due with the segregation act that is in no way a valid argument is that a 21-year-old man by the name of Daniel Desdunes bought a first class ticket, he then got on a white only car and was arrested and charged with criminal …show more content…
A lot of colored people were kept away from voting by being beaten, killed, or having people threaten to kill their family. Many if not the high majority of colored people were illiterate and even if they weren’t they would be considered it by a large group of whites making it so that they wouldn’t be approved to vote. There also were property tests which made sure that if you didn’t own any land you couldn’t vote, which was the majority of the colored population within the south during this time. The Grandfather Clause made it so that if couldn’t read nor owned land that if your father or grandfather had put in a vote before 1867 then you were able to vote and this worked in favor of whites, because blacks weren’t allowed to vote before then. Also even when some blacks were able to vote they were primarily white elections due to them claiming that the democratic party was a “club” for whites only. So based off of these claims the democratic party won pretty much every time especially in the deep south. Another interesting thing that would occur during this time was that people would sometimes purge the voting polls by taking people's names off of the official voting list and this primarily came into effect by having an impact on the amount of black voters. Interestingly enough people who were arrested weren’t able to cast a vote as well so this meant a high ratio of blacks