Jim Crow

29 Pins
·
2y
Blackface Is Older Than You Might Think
Blackface Is Older Than You Might Think | Arts & Culture | Smithsonian Magazine
Remember the Ladies: Ida B Wells
Remember the Ladies: Ida B Wells - YouTube
Mississippi to vote on Jim Crow-era law designed to secure 'white supremacy' in state politics
Mississippi to vote on Jim Crow-era law designed to secure 'white supremacy' in state politics - ABC News
Mississippi to vote on Jim Crow-era law designed to secure 'white supremacy' in state politics
Mississippi to vote on Jim Crow-era law designed to secure 'white supremacy' in state politics - ABC News
Ida B. Wells Marches for Justice
Ida B. Wells Marches for Justice | AMERICAN HERITAGE
Nearly 2,000 Black Americans Were Lynched During Reconstruction
Nearly 2,000 Black Americans Were Lynched During Reconstruction | Smart News | Smithsonian Magazine
Lost African American Cemetery Found Under Florida Parking Lot
Lost African American Cemetery Found Under Florida Parking Lot | Smart News | Smithsonian Magazine
How Hollywood Cast White Actors in Caricatured Asian Roles | HISTORY
Whites portray Asians - yellow face
The 1965 Alabama "Literacy Test" for non-white voters. Take the whole test with 68 questions here: http://www.pbs.org/wnet/jimcrow/literacy_popup.html Did you pass? - Annabel
Reconstruction Activity Black Codes and Jim Crow Laws Primary Source Hands-on
Great activity to insure that students know the difference between Black Codes and Jim Crow Laws - using primary sources!
Perspective | How social media spread a historical lie
Perspective | How social media spread a historical lie
To my Jewish, Irish, Asian and Italian friends
People who call themselves "real Americans" and support discrimination based on ethnicity need a wake-up call, writes Josh Brown.
Black Children's Books & Authors
On This Day 1904: Mary McLeod Bethune opens her first school for African-American students in Daytona Beach, Florida. The school eventually became Bethune-Cookman University and Bethune went on to become an advisor to President Franklin D. Roosevelt.