According to the discussion with fellow classmates on the topic of consistency in reference of the Constitution and Bill of Rights in comparison to the newly added Reconstruction Amendments which we're the 13th, 14th and 15th, not only did it change American society drastically, but continues to have an on going impact in the 21st century most importantly modern day immigration. It was a catalyst for many other movements around the same time such as Women's suffrage and the rise of Feminists. A slow progressive change and thought within the South as Slaves who are now considered as equals, at least in theory; to the extent of becoming American citizens who are allowed to have opinions and rights. Elected African Americans held office …show more content…
titles in which allowed many forms of help to be developed in the communities such as education in support of public school systems, help for the lower class and labor laws. Physical rapid change had finally come into affect however, mentally for the former slave owners and anti-abolitionist's refusal of intermingle with reformed ex slaves.
Many old habits and opinions clearly didn't leave the minds of White Americans who strongly insisted segregation would work best. Although with a positive change to take place for equality a negative reaction can also occur such as terrorist groups . According to the discussions the unanimous opinion was that black slaves felt they we're part of society and we're made to feel like human beings. This seems to be troublesome because there was an on going violence, lynchings, verbal and physical abuses to African Americans and Liberal White Americans who we're in favor of abolition. Poverty also played a strong hold for many freed African Americans. Eric Foner quotes , An elderly ex slave by the name of Mary Gaffney, she summed up the end of Reconstruction as, " We were not given a thing but freedom." However, from the discussion many fellow classmates had come to the conclusion that because an amendment was placed and the idea of freedom was awarded to slaves, it would be inaccurate to assume freed slaves we're living with the same equality and rights of White Americans . The existence of rights and laws is no guarantee in and of itself that it would be executed and applied with the same consideration of the social and ethical context that they we're created to protect and …show more content…
ensure. Which leads into the 2nd discussion of the Western expansion of The Great Plains and further out West.
This mass migration in search for the American Dream in order to form the country as a union was great incentive. Yet the execution which relied on the backs of poor labor, a mass genocide and relocation of Native Nations who have been living in the Midwest, taking advantage of the mass immigration of Europeans and Asians which were pouring into the country. The advancement of the country such as railroads, steel and oil lead to large and wealthy business men. Capitalism on the rise it not only allowed for wealthy business men to intimidate smaller businesses, which of course to occur in the 21st century. Modern Monopolizing of many companies would never allow small stores to flourish or new businesses to prosper unless a percentage is given in order to have a chance at
success. Even though many of my fellow classmates agreed with Carnegie, Gould, Morgan and Rockefeller being "Captains of Industry" which did pave the way for business models and Entrepreneurs. Which in light lead to many advancements yet the competition to monopolize every industry lead to vicious intimidation tactics and buying out small businesses. As much as I would like to agree with my peers with the rise of new jobs that allowed many people to work it also lead to low wages, long hours and terrible working conditions. The constant theme in a growing young country is the rapid change of radical ideas, the endless trial and error of progressive ideologies with the misconduct and exploitation of a certain group of people in order for it to become a public concern. Majority of the time money is the largest incentive in order for growth as well as the large population of labor masses. Unions are formed to try and make a change, it had the right idea of involving people of all races to protest the exploitation of labor in the work force however, we're sadly mistreated or slaughtered during protests such as the Haymarket Square that took place in Chicgao. When the American Federation of Labor Union formed they aimed at a specific skilled worker who is a white american only then we're businesses willing to participate in reform and negotiations. The continue abuse of low wages with high cost of living continues effect the work force, such as the Trucking industry to the fast food chains and super stores. Often times because a certain demographic of people who are hired or who are working at these companies are overlooked or felt as though they are not important to live with decent wages. Ultimately the distraction of social media and entertainment can hinder a generation of the realities occurring in the country. Social injustices, racism, deportation, immigration laws, and civil rights continue to be an on going issue in the 21st century. The past is not as far back as it seems when two generations ago civil rights we're being fought against segregation, interment camps for specific ethnicity and deportation raids. Acknowledging United States history can give a foreshadow of how it may be digressing or progressing as time passes. History has a tendency to repeat a constant flux of trial and error.
Groups of people soon received new rights. Congress passed the Civil Rights Act. It gave black Americans full citizenship and guaranteed them equal treatment. Also, it passed the Fourteenth Amendment to make sure that the Supreme Court couldn’t declare the Civil Rights Act unconstitutional. The amendment made blacks citizens of the United States and the states in which they lived. Also, states were forbidden to deprive blacks of life, liberty, or property without due process. Additionally, blacks could not be discriminated by the law. If a state would deprive blacks of their rights as citizens, it’s number of congressional representatives would be reduced. The Civil Rights Act as well as the Fourteenth Amendment affected both the North and the South.
After the Civil War, blacks were provided with rights they probably never dreamed of having during slavery. They were made citizens of the United States and given equal protection under the laws. If you were male, and of a certain age, you were also given the ballot. Each of these things represented both a great victory for for the freed people, and the promise of a bright future.
With the combination of the above mentioned, the freedmen had many basic rights stripped away from them. They couldn’t vote, were killed and preyed upon mercilessly and many other terrible matters. White Southern Democrats took advantage of their over whelming power in Congress and didn’t pass rights to protect the freedmen; groups such as the KKK and White Leagues intimidated and killed freedmen and those who supported them; and Congress didn’t have a plan for the slaves when they freed them. With all of these events together, the freedmen had far from equal rights. They were ‘separate but equal’. With the mixture of these incidents, the consequence was that Congress ultimately failed in their efforts to provide equal rights for freedmen.
We saw the Thirteenth Amendment occur to abolish slavery. We also saw the Civil Rights Acts which gave full citizenship, as well as the prohibiting the denial of due process, etc. Having the civil rights laws enabled African Americans to new freedoms which they did not used to have. There was positive change occurring in the lives of African Americans. However, there was still a fight to suppress African Americans and maintain the racial hierarchy by poll taxes and lengthy and expensive court proceedings. Sadly, this is when Jim Crow laws appeared. During this time African Americans were losing their stride, there was an increase in prison populations and convict labor, and the convicts were
Reconstruction(1865-1877) was the time period in which the US rebuilt after the Civil War. During this time, the question the rights of freed slaves in the United States were highly debated. Freedom, in my terms, is the privilege of doing as you please without restriction as long as it stays within the law. However, in this sense, black Americans during the Reconstruction period were not truly free despite Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation in 1863. While legally free, black Americans were still viewed through the lens of racism and deeply-rooted social biases/stigmas that prevented them from exercising their legal rights as citizens of the United States. For example, black Americans were unable to wholly participate in the government as a
Throughout time there have been many amendments to the United States Constitution. Some have had little to no effect on the population. One amendment that this writer will take a look at is the Fourteenth Amendment. The wording of the amendment has been debated here recently but bottom line it abolished slavery. This amendment also made an attempt to equalize everyone that is born here in America or naturalized. The ripple effect of this change to the constitution is still being felt today. It is hard to imagine living in a world where the African American community was not considered equal to the white man. A ground breaking distinction in the language written out in the document was that of it applying on the federal level as well as the state jurisdiction. This is especially important as we see the civil union marriages have conflict
During the four decades following reconstruction, the position of the Negro in America steadily deteriorated. The hopes and aspirations of the freedmen for full citizenship rights were shattered after the federal government betrayed the Negro and restored white supremacist control to the South. Blacks were left at the mercy of ex-slaveholders and former Confederates, as the United States government adopted a laissez-faire policy regarding the “Negro problem” in the South. The era of Jim Crow brought to the American Negro disfranchisement, social, educational, and occupational discrimination, mass mob violence, murder, and lynching. Under a sort of peonage, black people were deprived of their civil and human rights and reduced to a status of quasi-slavery or “second-class” citizenship. Strict legal segregation of public facilities in the southern states was strengthened in 1896 by the Supreme Court’s decision in the Plessy vs. Ferguson case. Racists, northern and southern, proclaimed that the Negro was subhuman, barbaric, immoral, and innately inferior, physically and intellectually, to whites—totally incapable of functioning as an equal in white civilization.
Although many laws were passed that recognized African Americans as equals, the liberties they had been promised were not being upheld. Hoffman, Blum, and Gjerde state that “Union League members in a North Carolina county, upon learning of three or four black men who ‘didn’t mean to vote,’ threatened to ‘whip them’ and ‘made them go.’ In another country, ‘some few colored men who declined voting’ were, in the words of a white conservative, ‘bitterly persecute[ed]” (22). Black codes were also made to control African Americans. Norton et al. states that “the new black codes compelled former slaves to carry passes, observe a curfew, live in housing provided by a landowner, and give up hope of entering many desirable occupations” (476). The discrimination and violence towards African Americans during this era and the laws passed that were not being enforced were very disgraceful. However, Reconstruction was a huge stepping stone for the way our nation is shaped today. It wasn’t pretty but it was the step our nation needed to take. We now live in a country where no matter the race, everyone is considered equal. Reconstruction was a success. Without it, who knows where our nation would be today. African American may have never gained the freedoms they have today without the
The legality of racial segregation was the result of a deeply flawed belief held by the majority of Americans that blacks were inherently inferior and would never be treated the same as whites. African Americans had been regarded as property for centuries prior to the Civil Rights Movement, and that mindset had to be changed for the creation of new laws or abolition of old laws to have any ...
... and slavery left millions of newly freed African Americans in the South without an education, a home, or a job. Before reconstruction was put in place, African Americans in the South were left roaming helplessly and hopelessly. During the reconstruction period, the African Americans’ situation did not get much better. Although helped by the government, African Americans were faced with a new problem. African Americans in the South were now being terrorized and violently discriminated by nativist groups such as the Ku Klux Klan. Such groups formed in backlash to Reconstruction and canceled out all the positive factors of Reconstruction. At last, after the Compromise of 1877, the military was taken out of the South and all of the Reconstruction’s efforts were basically for nothing. African Americans in the South were back to the conditions they started with.
Bruce Catton made the statement that when the two sides of the nation went to war they destroyed one America, inventing another, which is still forming in the present. The war changed the political aspect of the country expanding the federal government. While local state governments still exist in the present, its power had, is much more restricted than what it was in the pre-war years. Such examples like the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments were passed during Reconstruction; they showed the power that the federal government had in post-war America. Though the amendments promised voting rights and anti-discrimination laws towards African Americans, the federal government forced the Southern States to accept these amendments amongst other regulations to become part of the Union, showing the true power that the government had over the nation and the states. Society and the economy of the nation were have affected the South though farming and sharecropping still existed, life like that of the Antebellum years was over, leading to industrialization to begin to take place in the South. Such social issues as racism still affect and affected the nation well into the mid-twentieth century with the rise of the Civil Rights Movement, which saw its main emphases of events in the 1950s and
After the emancipation of slaves in 1862, the status of African-Americans in post civil war America up until the beginning of the twentieth century did not go through a great deal of change. Much legislation was passed to help blacks in this period. The Civil Rights act of 1875 prohibited segregation in public facilities and various government amendments gave African-Americans even more guaranteed rights. Even with this government legislation, the newly dubbed 'freedmen' were still discriminated against by most people and, ironically, they were soon to be restricted and segregated once again under government rulings in important court cases of the era.
...h past prejudices and previous beliefs elongated the process of desegregation, African Americans were still successful and were able to be free.
Politically the African Americans made a major improvement. They gained the right to vote and the right to hold a government position. The right to vote was a major improvement for African Americans. They
...or southern blacks to vote. In 1967 the Supreme Court rules interracial marriage legal. In 1968 Martin Luther King Jr. was shot dead at the age of thirty-nine. Also the civil rights act of 1968 is passed stopping discrimination in the sale, rental, and financing of housing. In 1988 President Reagan’s veto was overridden by congress passing the “Civil Rights Restoration Act” expanding the reach of non-discrimination laws within private institutions receiving federal funds. In 1991 President Bush. signs the, “Civil Rights Act of 1991”, strengthening existing civil rights laws. In 2008 President Obama is elected as the first African American president. The American Civil Rights Movement has made a massive effect on our history and how our country is today. Without it things would be very different. In the end however, were all human beings regardless of our differences.