The Mississippi Black Code

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After hundreds of years of slavery in the western world, the end of the American Civil War brought forth a new age of questions which debated what rights qualifed as unalienable civil and human rights, and who should be afforded them. Whether it be the right to marry, the right to own land, the right to work, the right to vote, or the right to be a citizen, African Americans had to fight for and prove that these were rights that could not be denied to them as freedmen in America. After the Civil War and the abolishment of slavery, there was a great split in opinion between white and black Americans about what American freedom entailed and whether or not African Americans had fair access to it. American slavery was a practice which left black …show more content…

In what was essentially the south’s repsonse to the passing of the 13th amendment, in 1865, a series of laws known as the “Mississippi Black Code” were passed into law which further specified and clarified the rights granted to African Americans in the south. These rights included the right to buy and own property, the right to make legal contracts, the right to testify in court, and the right to marry other African …show more content…

One of these stipulations was that African American minors under 15 who were orphaned after the war could be returned to their former white slave owners under the agreement of an apprenticeship. The minor would be provided food, shelter, education, and medical care in exchange for servitude until the age of 18 or 21, and should the apprentice try to escape or end his employment early that the “master or mistress may pursue and recapture said apprentice, and bring him or her before any justice of the peace of the county, whose duty it shall be to remand said apprentice to the service of his or her master or mistress; and in the event of a refusal on the part of said apprentice so to return, then said justice shall commit said apprentice to the jail of their county” (Johnson, Michael P., “Mississippi Black Code, November 1865”, Reading the American Past, p. 319). Further, it specified that anyone who attempted to aid or deter anyone else’s apprentice with food, water, clothing or otherwise would be subject to imprisonment for “enticing from their employer hired freedmen, free Negroes or mullattos…” (“Mississippi Black Code, November 1865”, Reading the American Past, p. 319). This ironic regulation of “free” black orphans exemplified that white southerners wanted to able to continue to utilize

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