African American History
African American History
African American History
early 19th century. Until the mid-20th century, the African American
population was concentrated in the Southern states. Even today, nearly half
of all African Americans live in the South. Blacks also make up a significant
part of the population in most urban areas in the eastern United States and
in some mid-western and western cities as well.
The Portuguese, Dutch, and British controlled most of the Atlantic slave
trade. Most Africans taken to North America came from the various cultures
of western and west central Africa. The territories that are now Ghana,
Togo, Benin, and Nigeria were the origins of most slaves brought to North
America, although significant numbers also came from the areas that are
now Senegal, Gambia, and Angola. These areas were home to diverse
linguistic, ethnic, and religious groups. Most of the people enslaved were
subsistence farmers and raised livestock. Their agricultural and pastoral
skills made them valuable laborers in the Americas.
The first Africans brought to the English colonies in North America came on
a Dutch privateer that landed at Jamestown, Virginia, in August 1619. The
ship had started out with about 100 captives, but it had run into extremely
bad weather. When the ship finally put into Jamestown, it had only 20
surviving Africans to sell to the struggling colony. Soon many of the colonies
along the Atlantic seaboard started importing African slaves. The Dutch
West India Company brought 11 Africans to its garrison trading post in New
Amsterdam (known today as New York City) in 1626, and Pennsylvanians
imported 150 Africans in 1684.
IV SLAVES IN COLONIAL AMERICA
Virtually all colonies had a small number of free blacks, but in colonial
America, only Maryland had a sizeable free black population. Over the
generations of enslavement, at least 95 percent of Africans in the United
States lived in slavery. But even as early as the 1600s, some gained their
freedom by buying themselves or being bought by relatives. Since slavery
was inherited through the status of the mother, some blacks became free if
they were born to non-slave mothers. Others gained their freedom from
bondage for meritorious acts or long competent labor.
In their day-to-day lives, slaves and servants shared similar grievances and
frequently formed alliances. Advertisements seeking the return of slaves
and servants who had run away together filled colonial newspapers. When a
slave named Charles escaped in 1740, the Pennsylvania Gazette reported
that two white servants, a "Scotch man" and an Englishman, escaped with
him. Sometimes interracial alliances involved violence. During Bacon's
Rebellion in 1676, slaves and servants took up arms against Native
Americans and the colonial government in Virginia. In 1712 New York
officials executed Native Americans and African American slaves for plotting
a revolt, and in 1741 four whites were executed and seven banished from
colonial New York for participating with slaves in a conspiracy. People in
similar circumstances—poor and unfree whites, Native Americans, and
blacks-formed alliances throughout the colonial era.
Colonists, both black and white, worked together to fight what they saw as
British injustices. Interracial mobs rioted against the Stamp Act of 1765 and
other despised regulations imposed on the colonies throughout the 1760s.
American protests targeted British officials and soldiers. In 1770 Crispus
Attucks, a fugitive slave of mixed African and Native American descent, led
an interracial crowd of sailors and laborers in attacking the British guard at
Boston's customs office. They threw snowballs, chunks of ice, and stones; in
response, the soldiers fired into the crowd, wounding six and killing Attucks
and four others. For rebellious Americans, the Boston Massacre, as this
event was named, symbolized Britain's armed determination to deprive
them of their rights.
When the American Revolution began in 1775, all but 25,000 of the 500,000
African Americans in British North America were enslaved. Many were
inspired by American proclamations of freedom, and both slaves and free
blacks stood against the British. The black minutemen at the Battle of
Lexington in 1775 were Pompy of Braintree, Prince of Brookline, Cato Wood
of Arlington, and Peter Salem, the slave of the Belknaps of Framingham,
freed in order that he might serve in the Massachusetts militia. Prince
Estabrook, a slave in Lexington, was listed among those wounded in this
first battle of the war. African Americans also served in the Battle of Bunker
Hill, where former slave Salem Poor received official commendation as "a
brave and gallant soldier."
African Americans hoped that men who wrote such lofty words as “all men
are created equal” would realize the immorality of continuing to enslave
their fellow countrymen. "We expect great things," one group wrote, "from
men who have made such a noble stand against the designs of their fellow
men to enslave them."
However, the American Revolution and the American colonies’ fight against
British oppression did not bring slavery to an end. The words slave and
slavery did not appear in the Constitution written in 1787, but the framers
of the Constitution struck a compromise allowing the slave trade to
continue until 1808. Slavery remained important to the economy of the new
nation, and after the Revolution, it became more concentrated in the South.
In 1793 the invention of the cotton gin, a simple device that revolutionized
the processing of raw cotton, dramatically increased the profitability of
cotton cultivation. More slave labor was dedicated to cotton production;
slave prices increased, and the value of cotton rose sharply. In addition,
slavery spread southward and westward into the vast area acquired from
France through the Louisiana Purchase in 1803. By 1815 cotton was
America's most valuable export, and the economic and political power of
cotton-growing states, often called the "Cotton Kingdom," grew
correspondingly.
The need for slave labor, and thus the price of slaves, was much higher in
states in the lower South, such as Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana, than
in the states of the upper South, including Virginia and Maryland. The result
was a thriving domestic slave trade that devastated many slave
households. Teenage boys and young adult men were especially desirable
laborers for the new areas, and slave families in the upper South lost sons,
brothers, and young fathers to the cotton plantations of the lower South. At
the time of the Revolution, most slaves were held along the southeastern
seaboard, but by 1860 the greatest concentrations of slaves were in the
lower South.
The lives of slaves were greatly influenced by where they lived and worked.
In Southern cities, slaves provided household services, labored for small
businessmen and merchants, and sometimes worked as municipal garbage
workers or firefighters. Both in cities and on plantations, skilled slaves did
the carpentry, built and sometimes designed the buildings, crafted ornate
furnishings, prepared elaborate meals, supplied music for planters' formal
balls and parties, and provided services ranging from veterinary care to folk
medicine for both whites and blacks. Plantations employed small numbers
of slaves as household servants and some as skilled workers. Most slaves,
however, worked in the fields. Plantation life, especially in the lower South,
was hard and dangerous, but because of the larger numbers of slaves, it
offered greater opportunities for establishing slave families and
communities.
As the South expanded westward and as tobacco and rice cultivation gave
way to cotton, the way slaves worked changed. In the 18th and 19th
centuries slaves working on plantations in the Sea Islands of South Carolina
and Georgia often labored under the task system. Typically, a slave was
given a task each day and worked until that task was completed. Once the
daily task was finished, the rest of the day was the slave’s own. The work
was extraordinarily hard, but the worker exercised some control over the
pace of work and the length of the workday.
The vast majority of white Southerners could afford no slaves and struggled
for basic self-sufficiency, but many slaveholding planters were rich and
politically powerful. By the 1850s there were more millionaires in the
plantations from Natchez, Mississippi, to New Orleans, Louisiana, than in all
other areas of the nation combined. By 1860 the 12 richest counties in the
nation were all located in the South. The Southern economy depended on
slavery, and by 1860 the U.S. economy depended on the Southern cotton
that accounted for almost 60 percent of the value of all the nation's
exports.
other businesses.
Frederick Douglass
Frederick Douglass was born a slave in Tuckahoe, Maryland. The wife of his master helped him
educate himself. As a young man, he fled to Massachusetts, a free state, where he began to work for
the abolition of slavery. He wrote an autobiography, which was widely read, and published a
newspaper that discussed the evils of slavery and discrimination.
Hulton Deutsch2
Sojourner Truth
Sojourner Truth employed her charismatic presence and oratorical skills to speak for the abolition of
slavery across the United States. Freed from slavery in 1828, Truth encountered the abolitionist
movement in 1843 and became the first black woman to crusade for abolition; she was received by
U.S. President Abraham Lincoln in the White House in 1864.
Churches were among the first black organizations established; they were
the central institutions serving the community's sacred, social, and political
needs. Despite white opposition, some independent black churches were
organized in the South, generally with both slave and free members but
with free ministers. In the 1770s David George founded the Silver Bluffs
Church near Augusta, Georgia, and George Liele and Andrew Bryan
established the forerunner of the First African Baptist Church in Savannah,
Georgia.
In Philadelphia during the 1790s Jones and Allen established Saint Thomas
African Episcopal Church and the Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church
respectively. Mother Bethel, as it was commonly called, was one of the
country's largest Methodist congregations, with 1300 members by 1810. In
1816 black Methodists from the Middle Atlantic states formed the African
African Americans were also likely to seek fuller freedom and safety from
kidnapping or reenslavement by emigrating to Canada where slavery was
abolished in 1833. The vast majority, however, remained in the United
States, tied to their homes by kinship and a sense of entitlement. They
hoped to gain citizenship rights and were committed to fighting for the
freedom of those still enslaved.
A Antislavery Societies
In 1833 Garrison’s supporters, both blacks and whites, organized the
American Anti-Slavery Society (AASS). In less than a year, this society had
established 47 local chapters in ten states. Members worked to convince
Americans that slavery was immoral and argued for immediate
emancipation. They also provided aid to campaigns to end discrimination
and programs to educate blacks. Their attempts to win over major religious
denominations and Congress met with little success. Their speakers were
denied access to many churches and meeting houses, and for almost a
decade (1836-1845) Congress employed a "gag rule," refusing to hear their
antislavery petitions. Racial fears and public antagonism prompted mob
attacks on antislavery speakers and interracial gatherings.
B Underground Railroad
Many members of interracial antislavery societies added their efforts to the
work of black churches and other black organizations in a vast informally
organized network known as the Underground Railroad. The Underground
Railroad helped shelter and transport fugitive slaves who had escaped from
the South. Most escaped slaves remained in Northern communities, but some
fled to black settlements in Canada, where they would be safe from
recapture. Although most slaves found aid from the Underground Railroad
only when they reached the North, some were aided by such "conductors"
as Harriet Tubman who ventured into the South to lead people to freedom.
Through this underground, fugitives from slavery also escaped to freedom
in the West Indies, Mexico, and Native American territories in Florida and
the West.
Abolitionist networks were also activated in cases like the Amistad case. In
1839, 53 captured Africans being transported to Havana, Cuba killed the
Such developments in the 1850s led blacks to become more militant and
fueled renewed interest in emigration among a minority of African
Americans. Converts to militant black nationalism included Martin R. Delany
who led an exploratory expedition to Africa in 1859.
When white abolitionist John Brown laid plans to ignite and arm slave
uprisings, he found many black supporters. Five African Americans were
among the 18 men whom Brown led in a raid on the federal arsenal at
Harpers Ferry, Virginia (now West Virginia) in 1859. Although the raid failed
and Brown was hanged, black community gatherings commemorated John
Brown's martyrdom, and many considered Harpers Ferry the first skirmish
in a war against slavery.
African Americans hoped the Civil War would bring about the abolition of
slavery. In anticipation, they formed military units in many Northern cities in
the 1850s.
War finally came in the spring of 1861, and eleven Southern states seceded
from the Union and formed their own nation, the Confederate States of
America (or Confederacy). The black military units offered their service to
the United States, but the federal government initially refused to accept
African American troops. Lincoln feared that doing so would encourage the
slaveholding border states to join the Confederacy. As casualties mounted
during 1862, however, U.S. military commanders sometimes recruited black
soldiers without explicit authority. Finally in July 1862 Congress gave the
president authority to use black troops.
In the South slave labor on farms and in factories freed more whites to fight
in the war. The slaves, however, demonstrated their desire for freedom by
escaping from Confederate plantations by the tens of thousands. In the
beginning of the war, some Northern commanders returned slaves to their
masters, and others forced escapees to work for the U.S. Army. Then, on
January 1, 1863, Lincoln turned U.S. war aims toward slavery's destruction
by issuing his Emancipation Proclamation freeing slaves held by those
Southerners still in rebellion.
During the war, African American soldiers who served in the Union Army
were paid less than white soldiers and suffered racist treatment.
Confederates declared they would not treat captured black soldiers and
their white officers as legitimate prisoners of war. Instead they threatened
to treat captured black soldiers as runaway slaves and to execute their
white officers. At Fort Pillow, Tennessee, Confederate forces commanded by
Nathan Bedford Forrest, later an organizer of the Ku Klux Klan, murdered
hundreds of captured black soldiers in 1864. "Remember Fort Pillow"
became a rallying cry for black soldiers who became more determined to
defeat the Confederacy.
By the end of the war, the United States had depended on the services of
over 200,000 black soldiers and sailors, 24 of whom received the Medal of
Honor.
In April 1865 the Union defeated the Confederacy, and slavery came to an
end. President Lincoln acknowledged the critical role black troops had
played in winning the war. A few days later, on April 15, Lincoln was
assassinated, and Vice-President Andrew Johnson of Tennessee became
president. In December of that year the states ratified the 13th amendment
that formally abolished slavery. However, the U.S. victory and the end of
slavery did not bring complete freedom to Southern blacks. Instead, the
process of rebuilding the Union, known as Reconstruction, began.
XI RECONSTRUCTION
Even before the war ended, the government had begun discussing how to
deal with the aftermath of the war. In March 1865 the U.S. War Department
established the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands,
commonly called the Freedmen’s Bureau. The bureau was headed by Union
General Oliver Otis Howard and furnished food and medical supplies to
former slaves. It also established schools and helped former slaves
negotiate fair wages and working conditions.
Waiting for Rations
Recently freed blacks line up for rations at a Freedmen’s Bureau in the U.S. South. The Bureau was
formed in 1865 to provide food and medical and legal assistance to the newly emancipated blacks,
as well as to needy whites. The program produced several schools and educational institutions before
it was abandoned only a few years later.
Culver Pictures6
People in the North became upset by the ease with which the Southern
planters were reestablishing their dominance. Republicans in Congress
fought with the president to change his Reconstruction policies. After the
Democratic Party suffered a major defeat in the elections of 1866, the
Republican Party took charge of Reconstruction, pursuing a more radical
course. Congress passed the 14th Amendment in 1866 (ratified by the
states in 1868). It extended citizenship to blacks and protected their civil
rights by forbidding the states to take away “life, liberty, or property,
without due process of law.”
In 1868 John W. Menard became the first African American elected to the
U.S. House of Representatives from Louisiana, where nearly 50 percent of
the population was black. Congress refused to seat Menard, but others
followed. In 1870 Hiram Revels of Mississippi became the first black person
to sit in the U.S. Senate. In all, 20 blacks from Southern states served in the
U.S. House of Representatives and 2 in the U.S. Senate during
Reconstruction.
After 1877 Democratic governments were in power in all the Southern states,
and they continued taking away black rights. This was done in many different
ways—laws that enforced the separation of blacks and whites, the
sharecropping system that kept blacks economically dependent on whites,
and the increased disenfranchisement of blacks. Northern whites were tired
of spending time and money on the South. As a result, the discrimination and
oppression of the African Americans in the South went largely unchallenged.
Booker T. Washington
In the face of racial violence during the late 19th century, Booker T. Washington advised blacks to
stop demanding equal rights and simply get along with whites. His willingness to accept segregation
and inequality in exchange for economic advancement drew criticism from other black leaders,
notably W. E. B. Du Bois of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).
Pictorial Parade/Archive Photos7
Some blacks, especially those with Native American ancestry, found homes
with Native American nations, and a few followed in the footsteps of black
explorer and mountainman James Beckwourth, who had traveled
Conditions for blacks in the South deteriorated further when the Supreme
Court ruled against federal guarantees of African American rights. In 1883
the Court declared the Civil Rights Law of 1875 unconstitutional. In a series
of cases, the Court also drastically undermined the 14th Amendment's
protection of black citizenship rights and narrowed federal protection of the
right to vote guaranteed by the 15th Amendment. Finally in 1896 the
Supreme Court ruled in Plessy v. Ferguson that segregation was legal.
In January 1865 Union General William T. Sherman had issued Special Field
Order No. 15, setting aside abandoned lands on the sea islands and the
coastal region of South Carolina and Georgia for exclusive use of the
region's freed population. Former slaves were given temporary titles to 40-
acre plots of land with the promise that the titles would be made permanent
by appropriate legislation. However, President Johnson reversed Sherman's
order and ordered the abandoned plantations to be returned to their former
owners.
D Increased Disfranchisement
White Southerners also increased their domination in the South by denying
blacks the right to vote. Because the 15th Amendment to the Constitution
prohibited denying the right to vote based on race, white Southerners
developed other ways to disfranchise blacks. Beginning in Mississippi in
1890, they passed laws making it more difficult to vote, such as those that
required a person to pay a poll tax or pass a literacy test. These laws
discriminated against blacks who were often poor and illiterate, and many
were removed from the voting rolls. Officials exempted poor whites who
could pass the "good conduct test" by having a person of good standing in
the community vouch for them. After 1898, Southern states adopted
"grandfather clauses," which allowed illiterate and propertyless men to vote
if their grandfathers had been eligible to vote prior to the abolition of
slavery in 1865. Almost no blacks could meet this requirement.
Perhaps the most effective barrier to black political power was the white
primary election. The primary determined the candidates who would run in
the general election, but since the Democratic Party was the majority party,
the candidates that it nominated in its primary always won the election.
Primaries were the real election. Beginning in the 1890s Democrats were
able to bar blacks from voting in the primary on the pretext that the party
was a private club and thus not subject to federal laws prohibiting
discrimination.
But the appeal of white supremacy was too strong. This coalition fell apart
after 1896 as a result of intimidation and racist appeals to whites. The Ku
Klux Klan's racist beliefs that all whites were superior to all blacks meant
that whites were never at the bottom of society. In the end these beliefs
were far more appealing than the prospect of an interracial political
alliance.
B Racial Accommodation
African Americans debated the best response to the rising tide of racial
discrimination. Black educator Booker T. Washington reacted to this erosion
of rights by advocating a policy of racial accommodation. Washington, who
had been born into slavery, believed that protest aiming for social
integration and political rights was doomed to failure in the South. Instead,
he urged blacks to acquire occupational skills for economic advancement.
He argued that African Americans were the backbone of Southern labor and
urged sympathetic whites to encourage manual and agricultural education
for blacks to strengthen the Southern economy. With the financial support
of wealthy white businessmen, he established the Tuskegee Institute (now
Tuskegee University) in Alabama in 1881 to educate black workers.
The composers Scott Joplin and W. C. Handy and the poet-novelist Paul
Laurence Dunbar were among the black artists who achieved prominence at
the turn of the century. Many other lesser-known musicians and writers
combined Western musical styles with rhythmic and melodic forms rooted
in Africa and in slavery to create American jazz. This musical style reflected
African notions of improvisation and community and developed distinctive
regional styles, from the Dixieland popular in New Orleans and the western
South to the more sophisticated sounds that became the cool jazz of the
southern Atlantic states. As blacks migrated to the West and the North, they
carried these regional musical styles with them.
Most black leaders supported America's involvement in the war, but not all
agreed. Labor leader A. Philip Randolph and socialist Chandler Owen
vigorously opposed World War I and were sentenced to over two years in
jail for publishing their views. Leaders were united, however, in the view
that blacks' wartime sacrifices entitled them to first-class citizenship. At the
end of the war, African Americans were determined to demand respect from
the nation for which they had fought.
The most popular militant black leader during this period was a Jamaican
immigrant named Marcus Garvey who established the Universal Negro
Improvement Association (UNIA), an international organization, in 1914. The
UNIA had two to four million members at its height. Garvey was an
outspoken critic of racial injustice, who appealed to black pride and
identified with black working classes and the poor. His public appearances
in New York's Madison Square Garden and elsewhere attracted tens of
thousands of people.
Garvey was also highly critical of what he considered elitist middle class
black leadership. He was particularly opposed to the integrated NAACP and
to W.E.B. DuBois, the editor of its Crisis magazine. In return, black civil
rights leaders sharply criticized Garvey. His popularity and militancy also
led to his surveillance by the U.S. government. In 1922 Garvey was arrested
for mail fraud in connection with a steamship line he had established to
pursue trade with Africa. His subsequent conviction and imprisonment, and
his deportation in 1927, sent the UNIA into rapid decline.
The growth of black communities in the North also led to greater black
political influence. Black politicians were elected to many state and local
offices in the North. In 1928 Chicago's Oscar DePriest became the first
African American from outside the South to serve in Congress. Political
organizations represented the interests of both the emerging black middle
class and those of less affluent blacks, an example of the racial pride and
unity with which African Americans met white racism.
The labor movement was another area where blacks and whites worked
together. All-black organizations, such as the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car
Porters, led by A. Philip Randolph, worked with the industrial unions that
joined the interracial Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) to forge a
new, more militant labor movement. Labor unions played an important role
in forming the National Negro Congress, headed by Randolph, which was
organized to promote black economic interests.
Generally these black advisers were not politicians but community leaders,
such as educator Mary McLeod Bethune, social worker Lawrence A. Oxley,
and poet Frank S. Horne. Some held official positions in the Roosevelt
administration. William H. Hastie, dean of the Howard University Law
School, was appointed assistant solicitor in the Department of the Interior
and later became aide to the Secretary of War. Ralph Bunche worked in the
State Department, and Bethune was director of the Division of Negro Affairs
of the National Youth Administration. By the mid-1930s, Roosevelt had
appointed 45 African Americans to serve in his New Deal agencies.
The New Deal had mixed results in the black community. Federal relief
programs provided financial aid to desperately poor blacks, jobs for many,
and government-financed housing. Some black workers benefited from
administration efforts to protect industrial workers when New Deal policies
guaranteed unions the right to strike. Many more benefited from consumer
strikes and boycotts that black leaders organized to force white businesses
to hire black workers. In New York, Chicago, Washington, D.C., and other
cities, thousands of blacks participated in “Don’t Buy Where You Can’t
Work” campaigns. In New York’s Harlem, for example, boycotts led to many
more clerical, sales, and executive jobs for African Americans. Working
together during the New Deal strengthened long-standing alliances
between blacks and white liberals. These alliances were a foundation for
subsequent civil rights reforms.
The Social Security Act brought assistance to many workers, but it excluded
farmers and domestics—65 percent of all African American workers.
Similarly, the bulk of black workers were not covered by National Recovery
Administration codes (see National Industrial Recovery Act). Additionally,
many federal housing programs perpetuated residential segregation.
Roosevelt also declined to support proposed federal legislation against
lynching and did little to relieve discrimination against blacks in federal
relief programs.
One of the most dramatic developments that took place during the 1930s
was the realignment of black voters. Blacks in large numbers switched their
votes to the Democratic Party, deserting the Republican Party, the party of
Lincoln that blacks had supported since Reconstruction. This shift took
place partly as a result of blacks’ involvement in labor unions that generally
supported the Democrats, and partly in response to Republican efforts to
attract Southern segregationists. By the 1934 congressional elections, two
years after Roosevelt won the presidency, most blacks voted Democratic for
the first time.
During the 1930s, the NAACP led a vigorous legal battle against
discrimination, concentrating on ways to end legal segregation, especially
in education. The legal strategy for this battle was formulated by Charles
Houston, former dean of the Howard University Law School, and Thurgood
Marshall, a former student of Houston’s. The NAACP focused on the 1896
Plessy v. Ferguson Supreme Court decision which had allowed separate
facilities for blacks as long as they were equal to those provided for whites.
Since they were almost never equal, the NAACP attempted to force
Southern states to make them so.
The NAACP gained an initial victory in 1938 when the U.S. Supreme Court
ordered the admission of a black man to the University of Missouri law
school because the state had failed to provide such facilities for blacks. The
next year, attacks on legal segregation were intensified as the NAACP Legal
Defense Fund was created, and Marshall became its director.
African Americans were also quick to recognize the danger of Nazism and
its theories of Aryan superiority. To many, it resembled the segregationist
rhetoric of the American South. At the Berlin Olympics of 1936, black track
star Jesse Owens carried the pride of nonwhites as he symbolically
confronted Hitler's theories. In races against Germans and other Europeans,
Owens won four gold medals.
By the end of 1940, France had fallen to Hitler's forces, and Germany, Italy,
and Japan had formed an alliance. Within a year, Japan had moved into
China and Southeast Asia. The United States imposed trade sanctions on
Japan, but these failed to restrain Japan’s expansion. On Sunday morning
December 7, 1941, Japan attacked American forces stationed at Pearl
Harbor and other U.S. military facilities on Oahu in the Hawaiian Islands. A
black mess attendant aboard the USS West Virginia, Dorie Miller, was
among those later cited for distinction during the battle. In the heat of
battle, he pulled his wounded captain to safety. Although he had never fired
a machine gun before, Miller shot down as many as four attacking planes,
for which he later received the Navy Cross for heroism.
When the war began in Europe in 1937, there were only about 5000 black
enlisted men and fewer than a dozen black officers in the regular army.
Before the war ended in 1945, more than a million black men and about
4000 black women had served in the armed forces. Nearly half served
abroad, most in Europe and North Africa, but thousands also served in the
Pacific. African Americans served in all branches of the military during the
war.
In 1941 the 99th Pursuit Squadron, the first black combat unit in the Army
Air Corp, was established in Tuskegee, Alabama. More than 600 black pilots
trained for this highly decorated unit. They completed more than 500
missions in the first year of America's involvement in the war. Over 80 were
decorated with the Distinguished Flying Cross for combat over France,
Germany, North Africa, and Eastern Europe.
Yet even as blacks participated in the war abroad, black military troops
suffered all too familiar discrimination at home. In 1941, 100 African
American officers were arrested for protesting the whites-only policy of the
officer's club at Freeman Field in Indiana. In 1943 William Hastie, aide to the
U.S. Secretary of War, resigned his office to protest racial discrimination in
the armed forces.
By 1940 American factories were hiring new workers for war production,
finally relieving the depression's stubborn unemployment. But blacks
benefited less than white workers from rising employment and increased
wages. Discrimination in employment and wage policies continued to create
disadvantages for black workers.
Early in 1941, A. Philip Randolph met with Roosevelt administration officials
to demand equal employment for blacks in industries working under federal
government defense contracts. He threatened to lead 100,000 African
Americans in a march on Washington, D.C., to protest job discrimination.
Negotiations were heated, but finally Roosevelt issued Executive Order
8802 forbidding discrimination based on race, creed, color, or national
origin in the employment of workers for defense industries with federal
contracts. The order also established a Fair Employment Practices
Committee (FEPC) to oversee the implementation of the order. Roosevelt's
actions immediately opened thousands of steady well-paying jobs to black
workers and encouraged a new surge of migration from the South to
Northern cities.
The need for labor opened factory work to women and drew large numbers
from the domestic jobs many had taken during the worst days of the
depression. Working in war industries, black women found that the pay was
better and the work was generally less physically demanding than domestic
work. Also many black women who had lost domestic jobs to white women
during the 1930s now returned to take those jobs as whites left them.
African American men and women fully engaged in the war effort were
determined to pursue a "Double V Campaign," victory over fascism abroad
and victory over racism at home. Consequently, the pace of civil rights
protest quickened during the mid-1940s.
The late 1940s also saw the color barrier fall in many areas of society that
had been all white. One of the most dramatic instances occurred in 1947,
when Jackie Robinson joined the Brooklyn Dodgers, becoming the first black
to play major league baseball in the 20th century. In 1949 Wesley A. Brown
became the first African American to graduate from the U.S. Naval
Academy.
Following the war, the GI Bill, funded by the government, gave new
educational opportunities to veterans and promised greater economic
prosperity. Blacks were determined to be included. Thousands of black
veterans enrolled in technical training or colleges and universities, financed
by government benefits. These black veterans paved the way for ongoing
increases in African American college enrollments. The number of African
American college students increased from 124,000 in 1947 to 233,000 in
1961.
African Americans continued to migrate from the rural South to the urban
North to improve their economic status. From 1948 to 1961, the proportion
of blacks with low incomes (earning below $3000 a year) declined from 78
percent to 47 percent; at the same time the proportion earning over
$10,000 a year increased from under 1 percent to 17 percent. Although
black income improved, it remained far below that of whites. Black median
income in 1961 was still lower than white median income had been in 1948.
The Cold War, which began during the Truman administration, also became
a factor in postwar race relations. During the Cold War, the United States
and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) engaged in an intense
economic and political struggle for the allegiance of people around the
world. As part of the Cold War, the United States began a campaign against
Communism, the economic system of the USSR, both at home and abroad.
The anti-Communist campaign had a mixed impact on black America.
In the world arena, the United States presented itself as the champion of
freedom and democracy against the totalitarianism of Soviet Communism.
The United States was embarrassed by its denial of rights to African
Americans. Supporting black rights and appointing African Americans to
prominent governmental positions bolstered America's claims.
Meanwhile, after three years of negotiation, the black community and the
school board in Little Rock, Arkansas, devised a plan to enroll nine black
students at Central High School. When the plan was implemented in the fall
of 1957, Governor Orval Faubus used the National Guard to block the black
students from entering the school. The public outcry forced Eisenhower to
act. He put the National Guard under federal direction and sent federal
troops to enforce the Brown decision and protect the students from white
mobs. Nevertheless, the following year, Faubus closed all of Little Rock's
high schools rather than integrate them. Ten years after the Brown
decision, less than two percent of Southern black children attended
integrated schools.
Whites in many areas of the South organized private white schools rather
than accept integration. In 1959 officials in Prince Edward County, Virginia,
moved white students and state education funds to hastily organized white
private schools. For four years, until privately funded black schools could be
organized, black students in the county had no schools. Finally in 1963 the
county complied with court rulings and reopened the public schools. During
the early 1960s, it was necessary to maintain federal troops and marshals
on the University of Mississippi campus to ensure the right of a black
student to attend classes.
A Freedom Rides
In May 1961 SNCC and CORE set out to test compliance with a Supreme
Court ruling that prohibited segregation in facilities for interstate travel. To
do so, they revived a protest strategy CORE had used in 1947. They
organized what became known as the Freedom Rides—bus trips throughout
the South that attempted to desegregate buses and bus stations. After
informing federal authorities of their plans, the Freedom Riders—seven
blacks and six whites—set out from Washington, D.C., aboard two buses.
Along the way, the freedom riders encountered violent resistance from
whites. In South Carolina, whites beat and kicked two riders. In Alabama,
whites attacked and burned one bus and severely beat riders in both buses,
leaving one man permanently paralyzed. The riders ended their protest in
Birmingham, Alabama; they were unprotected by the police and were
unable to find a bus driver willing to continue the trip.
Then Diane Nash, a SNCC member, recruited other freedom riders, eight
blacks and two whites, to try to complete the ride. Again they met with
violence. This time the riders attracted more attention from the media, and
White House officials ordered their protection by federal marshals and
national guardsmen. Riders were nevertheless arrested and imprisoned in
Mississippi for entering a “whites-only” waiting room.
B Nonviolent Protests
Throughout the South, various types of nonviolent protests took place.
Activists boycotted stores that refused to hire blacks, marched in protests
against discrimination, and worked to change laws that enforced
segregation. In 1963 more than a million demonstrators were involved in
massive protests, and many demonstrators were attacked by whites
determined to maintain racial dominance.
C Voter Registration
Beginning in 1961 SNCC and CORE organizers undertook a dangerous
campaign in Mississippi, attempting to register black voters despite intense
white resistance. By 1962 Robert Moses, a black Harvard-educated
schoolteacher, had assembled a staff of organizers to work with local
residents. To bring attention, and perhaps some protection, to their efforts,
the workers organized the Mississippi Summer Project, also known as the
Freedom Summer project. They recruited and trained over 1000 Northern
volunteers—including African American and white students. These
volunteers helped people to register to vote and ran freedom schools
providing basic education and African American history. Within the first two
weeks, two whites, Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner, and one
black, James Chaney, were murdered. Fear and danger followed the
remaining volunteers that summer.
The Black Panthers enjoyed wide appeal among young men in the Northern
cities. The party quickly became a target for repression that included
undercover informants and surveillance by the police and the Federal
Bureau of Investigation (FBI). As Martin Luther King, Jr., began to speak out
against American involvement in the Vietnam War (1959-1975) and to
emphasize the need for economic changes, he too became a target for
government surveillance and harassment. In the summer of 1967, major
race riots erupted in Newark, Detroit, and other American cities. Often this
violence was attributed to tensions between black residents and white
police accused of brutality. In February 1968 the presidentially appointed
Kerner Commission reported that America was becoming "two societies,
one white, one black—separate and unequal." In April, King was
assassinated in Memphis, and the wave of racial violence that followed
seemed to confirm those conclusions.
African Americans had been barred from many restaurants, movie theaters,
nightclubs, and other public accommodations by customary practice.
Generally, landlords in white neighborhoods would not rent to black
tenants, forcing them to pay higher rents in the only housing available to
them in black neighborhoods. Banks denied financing, and real estate
agents refused to show houses in traditionally white areas to blacks even if
they could afford them.
In May 1968 Ralph Abernathy, who had been King’s lieutenant, established
an encampment called Resurrection City on the Mall in Washington, D.C. It
drew 2500 mostly black and Native American temporary residents, nearly
twice the number that organizers had planned on. Within a month, mud and
unsanitary conditions produced by heavy rains reduced the encampment to
fewer than 300 people. In June 1968 an interracial group of 50,000 marched
in Washington, D.C., to demonstrate their support for the Poor People’s
Campaign. They were ultimately unable to gain the sympathetic attention
of Congress and the country. At the end of the month, the demonstrators
were ordered to evacuate, and on June 24th the police evicted the 100 who
refused to leave amid clouds of teargas.
B Busing
As civil rights leaders turned their attention to de facto segregation in the
North, they devised a different strategy for improving educational
opportunities for black students. Since schools were supported by property
taxes, there were great differences in resources available for education
between poorer inner cities and wealthier white suburbs.
These plans had their greatest effect on working class ethnic neighborhoods
near inner cities. The newest, best-equipped schools, which were
predominately in affluent white suburbs, were less likely to be affected.
Busing raised parents’ concerns about having their children attend school
far from home. Although they welcomed the opportunities better schools
provided, black parents, whose children were most often bused, worried
about the students’ adjustment to a strange and often hostile school
environment. These concerns and continued opposition from many whites
ensured that busing remained controversial through the 1990s.
XXV CONSERVATIVE BACKLASH
Antipoverty programs and civil rights gains had positive effects: The black
middle class grew and black unemployment shrank to under 7 percent in
1968 and 1969. In the early 1970s, however, rising inflation and an
economic downturn caused widespread economic uncertainty among
African Americans. To deal with difficult economic issues, a new generation
of black leaders established new organizations. In 1971 Jesse Jackson
founded Operation PUSH (People United to Save Humanity) in Chicago to
work for the economic advancement of poor people, and in 1973 Marian
Wright Edelman began the Children’s Defense Fund, an organization that
lobbies for children’s rights and welfare.
By the end of the decade, the after-tax income of the richest one percent of
Americans had increased by 87 percent, while the income of those at the
bottom of the economy diminished. Black unemployment also grew during
the 1980s; by 1990, more than one in every four adult black men between
the ages of 24 and 54 were out of work. The rate was much higher for
young black men in the inner city, and overall black unemployment was
two-and-a-half times higher than white unemployment. In 1983 black
unemployment stood at a record high of almost 21 percent.
Correspondingly, the overall black poverty rate rose so that by 1989 almost
one-third of all black Americans were below the poverty line, more than
three times the rate for whites.
Not only did poverty and unemployment and their deadly effects increase
for black Americans, but the income gap between them and white
Americans grew dramatically. That gap had decreased during the 1960s
and early 1970s, but by 1984 the disparity had returned to the level it had
been in 1960. Yet, some middle class blacks had become more
economically secure, as the proportion of black households earning incomes
of $50,000 or more rose 46 percent during the 1980s.
By the late 1970s, the concept of affirmative action in higher education was
challenged in the Supreme Court by Allan Bakke, a white student who had
been denied admission to Davis Medical School at the University of
California. Bakke charged that he had been the subject of "reverse
discrimination" because black students with lower academic credentials had
been admitted to the school. Advocates of affirmative action pointed to the
number of white students with academic records inferior to Bakke's who
had been admitted to the school under so-called legacy admissions
provided to the children of alumni. They argued that the university often
considered factors other than grades in its admissions decisions. The Court
ignored these arguments and ordered Bakke admitted, but its position on
affirmative action was unclear.
One year later the Court ruled that labor unions and businesses could
design special programs aimed at helping blacks get jobs and promotions
where it was shown that there had been "manifest racial imbalance." In
1980 the Court approved Congress's right to impose goals for minority
representation as a means for increasing the number of minority and
female contractors doing business with the federal government and to
counteract past discrimination.
Throughout the 1990s, affirmative action remained one of the nation's most
divisive racial issues. Some people continued to see it as reverse
discrimination and used the language of the civil rights movement to
condemn the use of racial or gender preferences. California voters rejected
the affirmative action programs that had helped integrate the state's
university system. Affirmative action plans in other states and in private
industry were also attacked severely.
One of the most hopeful signs of racial progress during the decade was civil
rights leader Jesse Jackson's run for the Democratic presidential nomination
in 1988. Jackson was the first black man to mount a serious campaign for a
major party's presidential nomination. He won Virginia's Democratic
primary and 6.6 million primary votes nationally. Jackson did not win the
nomination, but he amassed 1200 delegates at the Democratic convention
and was recognized as a major power in the party.
In 1983 Vanessa Williams became the first African American to win the Miss
America Contest, and The Color Purple (1982) by black author Alice Walker
won the Pulitzer Prize for literature. In 1988 Toni Morrison, another African
American writer, received the Pulitzer Prize for her novel, Beloved (1987).
Such black performers and sports stars as Michael Jackson, Michael Jordan,
and Bill Cosby became national icons.
Yet, public racial intolerance and shocking acts of racial violence offered
disturbing signs that race was still very significant. A young black man was
killed in 1986 in Howard Beach, a white residential section of New York City.
He was attempting to escape a mob that challenged his right to be there. In
a similar incident three years later, a black teenager was killed by a white
gang in the Bensonhurst section of Brooklyn. Another divisive issue in the
1980s was white opposition to legislation making the birthday of Martin
Luther King, Jr., a national holiday. Then in 1991, video pictures of Los
Angeles police beating Rodney King, a black motorist stopped for a traffic
violation, were broadcast on national TV. For many, this was visual proof
that police brutality continued against African Americans. The acquittal of
the white officers involved by an all-white jury sparked national outrage and
a race riot in Los Angeles.
The extent of conflicting racial views was revealed by the differing reactions
to the murder trial of black sports commentator and former football star O.J.
Simpson in 1995. Simpson was accused of murdering his estranged wife
and her companion, and his lawyers presented a defense that charged the
Los Angeles police with racial bias. The televised trial became a public
spectacle dramatizing opposing perceptions of the legal system. The jury’s
not guilty verdict outraged most whites who saw it as a miscarriage of
justice and satisfied many African Americans who considered it a justifiable
indictment of police racism. Television recorded these contrasting reactions
to the verdict: a white crowd stunned, a black group elated.
The racial divide in America remained a critical issue in the late 1990s. In
1995 Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan, perceived by many whites and
some blacks to be a purveyor of anti-Semitism, organized the Million Man
March in Washington, D.C. Although many condemned Farrakhan as a black
racist, the Million Man March brought hundreds of thousands of black men
to Washington to show black pride and solidarity. Participants pledged
themselves to work for positive change in their communities. Two years
later, a call for a Million Woman March brought tens of thousands of black
women to Philadelphia in a similar show of concern.
Contributed By:
Lois E. Horton
James Oliver Horton