The Jim Crow Era

In 1877, the newly inaugurated President Rutherford B. Hayes removed the last armed troops from the former Confederate States of America. Since the end of the war, military outposts had been placed throughout the South to distribute aid, maintain order, and ensure that residents adhered to the newly implemented Reconstruction Amendments. These amendments included the 13th Amendment, which abolished slavery; the 14th Amendment, which granted citizenship regardless of race; and the 15th Amendment, which granted the ability to vote regardless of race. All Southern States were required to ratify these three amendments before they could reenter the United States. However, there were factions of the South that disagreed with these new amendments and equality between black and white individuals. As the Reconstruction era ended in 1877 and oversite lessened, many wanted to recreate the antebellum race relations between black and white individuals.  In order to recreate this social status, 鈥淛im Crow Laws鈥 were established that limited African American's political and social rights in the Southern States. This era of racial discrimination lasted well into the twentieth century and did not end until 1965.  

Thomas D. Rice depicted as the character "Jim Crow" drawn by Edward Williams Clay.

鈥淛im Crow Laws鈥 get their name from a character created and performed by the 鈥渇ather of American minstrelsy鈥 Thomas D. Rice in the 1830s. Rice claimed that 鈥淛im Crow鈥 was modeled after a disabled black slave who sang and danced as he worked. Finding the singing and dancing comical, he bought the clothes from the slave in order to be 鈥渞ealistic鈥 in his portrayal and adopted the folk song 鈥淛ump Jim Crow,鈥 which was commonly sung by slaves, for his act. To appear African American, Rice rubbed burnt cork on his face. The public loved Rice and his Jim Crow character. From the 1830s to the 1850s, Rice traveled around the country performing in minstrel shows. These shows consisted of comedic skits, songs, variety acts, and dancing and commonly perpetuating negative stereotypes of African Americans for entertainment. With Rice鈥檚 popularity, minstrel shows became a leading form of entertainment until the Civil War and other performers began to copy Rice鈥檚 character and styling. The practice of rubbing cork on his face became known as 鈥渂lackface鈥 and became a standard addition to the shows. 鈥淛im Crow鈥 became shorthand for 鈥淎frican American鈥 and lasted well after Rice died and minstrel shows lost their popularity. 

鈥淛im Crow Laws鈥 purposefully limited African Americans鈥 ability to engage with the political and public spaces. The laws were passed with more frequency once Southern jurisdictions limited African American participation in local and national elections. In the 1880s, literacy tests became a requirement to vote and to register to vote in many Southern districts. While the Freedmen鈥檚 Bureau and local charities attempted to bring education to rural and poor communities of color in the South, many inhabitants were still unable to pass these literary tests. To help less-educated white voters, 鈥淕randfather Clauses鈥 were established. If a citizen could prove that their grandfather was registered to vote, then they could register to vote regardless of if they could pass the literacy test. Since many African American鈥檚 grandfathers were slaves, and consequently unable to vote, then they could not utilize this loophole. Because of literacy tests, and other restrictions, Black voters in Southern states decreased. From 1896-1904, there were no registered Black voters in North Carolina. With little to no representation in the polling booths, African Americans were slowly losing representation in local and national politics. Without African Americans in local politics, the stage was set for restrictive laws on African Americans to pass with little opposition.  

A major characteristic of the Jim Crow Era was segregated public amenities justified under the idea of 鈥渟eparate, but equal,鈥 such as schools and hospitals. The 14th Amendment guaranteed 鈥渆qual protection鈥 under the law regardless of race and many lawyers reasoned that if these segregated accommodations were 鈥渆qual鈥 than they were also constitutional. This argument was codified in the Plessy v. Ferguson Supreme Court Case of 1896. In 1892, Homer Plessy, a mixed-race resident of New Orleans, boarded a train in Louisiana, told the conductor that he was African American, and refused to disembark from the 鈥淲hite Only鈥 car. He was arrested for violating the 鈥淪eparate Car Act,鈥 which established that white and non-white individuals must ride in separate cars. Plessy was a part of 罢丑别&苍产蝉辫;颁辞尘颈迟茅&苍产蝉辫;诲别蝉&苍产蝉辫;颁颈迟辞测别苍蝉&苍产蝉辫;(鈥淭he Citizens Committee鈥 in French) that was created to protest this Act. In Louisiana Court, the 颁辞尘颈迟茅 argued that the Act violated the Thirteenth and Fourteenth amendments because it did not give equal treatment to African Americans and white individuals under the law. Louisiana ruled that the state had the right to regulate railroad companies within state borders. After the ruling, the Citizens Committee petitioned the Supreme Court to hear the case.  

Engraving by Alfred R. Waud depicting African American men voting in 1867.

In a now-infamous case, the Supreme Court ruled against Plessy in a 7-1 decision. The majority opinion, written by Justice Henry Billings Brown, stated that the Separate Car Act did not violate either amendment. Brown stated that the 13th Amendment was not violated because it only covered basic legal provisions to ensure that African Americans could not be enslaved again. The 14th amendment, he noted, only gave legal equality to all races and could not stop social or legal discrimination of a specific race. Any state, Brown continued, could exercise laws that separated people based on race if it was 鈥渞easonable.鈥 The court also gave legal precedent for the states to self-regulate what was 鈥渞easonable鈥 or not. Since many African Americans were barred from voting for their political leaders or running themselves, they could not properly prosecute 鈥渦nreasonable鈥 conditions and many of these facilities were not 鈥渆qual.鈥 This decision was not overturned until the  in 1954 and Plessy v. Ferguson allowed legal segregation for the next five decades.  

Violence was also utilized to control and recreate pre-Civil War social structures instigated by white supremacist groups, such as the Ku Klux Klan (KKK). On December 24, 1865, six former-Confederate commanders banded together to create a white-supremacist fraternal group. The group鈥檚 goal was to weaken African Americans鈥 political power and to recreate the stratified social structure that existed before the Civil War. A common control tactic was publicly lynching African Americans. Mobs attacked African Americans that were accused of a crime, formally or informally, and publicly hanged them without a trial or due process of the law. Between 1882-1968, there were 4,743 recorded lynchings in the United States. With the fear of violence, few African Americas fought racist laws or racial social hierarchies. Due to internal conflicts, the Klan lost followers in 1871 but was reenergized in 1915 with the debut of the movie The Birth of a Nation. This movie glorified Klansmen, Confederate commanders, and white supremacy while demonizing African Americans. The second iteration of the Klan continued into the 1940s and then faded again. A third iteration began in the 1950s and continues today.  

The Jim Crow Era began to falter and decline after WWII. During WWII, in order to combat labor shortages during the war, war industries were desegregated with the Fair Employment Act of 1941. In the 鈥50s, school districts that had been segregated since the Civil War began to win court cases for integration. School districts that were unable to win cases began to petition the Supreme Court, such as with Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka (1954) Supreme Court case. This case was an amalgamation of several school integration cases throughout the county. Unlike the Plessy v. Ferguson case of 1896, the Supreme court unanimously ruled that 鈥渟eparate, but equal鈥 was unconstitutional and that the segregation of public schools, and other public spaces, violated the Thirteenth and Fourteenth amendments.  

David Richmond, Franklin McCain, Ezell A. Blair Jr, and Joseph McNeil sit at the segregated lunch counter at F.W. Woolworth Company department store in Greensboro, NC.

The Civil Rights Era of the 1950s and 60s protested Jim Crow Laws and regulations. For example, the 1956 Montgomery Bus Boycott protested the policy that African Americans needed to relinquish their seats to white riders and sit in the back of the bus. After Rosa Parks was arrested for refusing to relinquish her seat to a white bus rider, residents of Montgomery, Alabama boycotted the bus system for 381 days. They withstood assaults from white citizens and the local KKK group until the buses were integrated. Also, 1960 Greensboro sit-ins protested the segregation of lunch counters by sitting at the segregated F. W. Woolworth Company amongst great backlashes. Three years later between 200,000 and 300,000 participants came to Washington D.C. for the 鈥淢arch on Washington for Jobs and Freedom鈥 to advocate for the civil and economic rights of African Americans. Throughout this era, organizations and individuals worked tirelessly to reverse the discriminatory laws of the Jim Crow Era. 

The Jim Crow Era ended in 1965. This end was prompted by the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 outlawed discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex or natural origin, such as discrimination in employment, in public accommodations, and voter registration. This act, while initially weak, gave the legal backing to file claims of discrimination that could be won by minority prosecutors. The Voting Rights Act of 1965, gave more legal backing to the Fourteenth and Fifteenth amendments by prohibiting state and local government from creating voting laws that unduly discriminate against minorities. This legislation forced local governments to remove unnecessarily hard literacy tests and landowning restrictions. While racial discrimination existed after these two acts, both helped usher in more accountability to discriminating legislations. Today, activists continue working to dismantle the legacy of these Jim Crow Laws in the political and social spheres.  

Further Reading
  •  By: Ira Berlin, Marc Favreau, Steven F. Miller
  •  By: David Blight 
  •  By: David Blight  
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  •  By: Eric Foner  
  •  By: David Pilgram