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African American History
I INTRODUCTION  African American History or Black American History, a
history of black people in the United States from their arrival in the
Americas in the 15th century until the present day. In 1996, 33.9
million Americans, about one out of every eight people in the United
States, were black. Although blacks from the West Indies and other areas
have migrated to the United States in the 20th century, most African
Americans were born in the United States, and this has been true since
the 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.
II AFRICAN HERITAGE ÂÂ
Africans and their descendants have been a part of the story of the
Americas at least since the late 1400s. As scouts, interpreters,
navigators, and military men, blacks were among those who first
encountered Native Americans. Beginning in the colonial period, African
Americans provided most of the labor on which European settlement,
development, and wealth depended, especially after European wars and
diseases decimated Native Americans.
African workers had extensive experience in cultivating rice, cotton,
and sugar, all crops grown in West and North Africa. These skills became
the basis of a flourishing plantation economy. Africans were also
skilled at ironworking, music and musical instruments, the decorative
arts, and architecture. Their work, which still marks the landscape
today, helped shape American cultural styles. They brought with them
African words, religious beliefs, styles of worship, aesthetic values,
musical forms and rhythms. All of these were important from the
beginning in shaping a hybrid American culture.
III THE SLAVE TRADE ÂÂ
Portuguese traders brought the first African slaves for agricultural
labor to the Caribbean in 1502. From then until 1860, it is estimated
that more than 10 million people were transported from Africa to the
Americas. The great majority were brought to the Caribbean, Brazil, or
the Spanish colonies of Central and South America. Only about 6 percent
were traded in British North America.
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.
To transport the captured Africans to the Americas, Europeans loaded
them onto specially constructed ships with platforms below deck designed
to maximize the numbers of slaves that could be transported. Africans
were confined for two to three months in irons in the hold of a slave
ship during the crossing of the Atlantic Ocean called the Middle
Passage. The meager diet of rice, yams, or beans and the filthy
conditions created by overcrowding resulted in a very high death rate.
Many ships reached their destinations with barely half their cargo of
slaves still alive to sell into forced labor 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 ÂÂ
A Occupation of Slaves  The vast majority of Africans brought to the
13 British colonies worked as agricultural laborers; many were brought
to the colonies specifically for their experience in rice growing,
cattle herding, or river navigation. For example, South Carolina
planters drew upon the knowledge of slaves from Senegambia in West
Africa to begin cultivating rice, their first major export crop. In the
South, slaves grew tobacco in Maryland, Virginia, and North Carolina,
and rice and indigo in South Carolina and Georgia. In the North, slaves
also worked on farms.
African Americans, slave and free, also worked in a wide variety of
occupations. They were household workers, sailors, preachers,
accountants, music teachers, medical assistants, blacksmiths,
bricklayers, and carpenters, doing virtually any work American society
required.
B Slave Populations  By 1750 there were nearly 240,000 people of
African descent in British North America, fully 20 percent of the
population, though they were not evenly distributed. The greatest number
of African Americans lived in Virginia, Maryland, and South Carolina
because large plantations with many slaves were concentrated in the
South. Blacks constituted over 60 percent of the population in South
Carolina, over 43 percent in Virginia, and over 30 percent in Maryland,
but only about 2 percent in Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, and New
Hampshire. In the Northern colonies, enslaved people were much more
likely to work in households having only one or a few slaves.
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.
C Slavery versus Indentured Servitude ÂÂ
Slavery was the most extreme, but not the only form of unfree labor in
British North America. Many Europeans and some Africans were held as
indentured servants. Neither slaves nor indentured servants were free,
but there were important differences. Slavery was involuntary and
hereditary. Indentured servants made contracts, often an exchange of
labor for passage to America. They served for a limited time, commonly
seven years, and generally received "freedom dues," often land and
clothing, upon finishing their indenture. Although some slaves gained
freedom after a limited term, others served for life, and a second
generation inherited the slave status of their mothers. Gradually by the
18th century, colonial laws were consolidated into slave codes providing
for perpetual, inherited servitude for Africans who were defined as
property to be bought and sold.
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 circumstancesâ€â€poor and
unfree whites, Native Americans, and blacks-formed alliances throughout
the colonial era.
V AMERICAN REVOLUTION  A Black Participation in the War ÂÂ
After the British defeated the French in the French and Indian War
(1754-1763), the British began to change their relationship with their
American colonies. They started to increase taxes, demanded that the
colonists help pay for British soldiers stationed in the colonies, and
controlled the colonial trade opportunities more carefully. Most
colonists were outraged, particularly about the new taxes. They felt
that Great Britain did not have the right to tax them, since it did not
allow them representatives in Parliament.
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."
At first General George Washington refused to recruit black troops. It
was the British who made the first move to enlist blacks. In November
1775 Lord Dunmore, the British colonial governor of Virginia, issued a
proclamation that all slaves belonging to rebels would be received into
the British forces and freed for their services. Tens of thousands of
slaves escaped from Southern plantations, and over a thousand fought for
the British. Tye, "a Negro who [bore] the title of colonel" led one
interracial guerrilla band in New Jersey. In the South, such bands,
called banditti, burned and looted plantations, stole horses, and
liberated slaves, some of whom became British soldiers.
The demands of war eventually changed Washington’s mind, and he began
to recruit black soldiers. Before the war was over, more than 5000
African Americans from every state except Georgia and South Carolina
served in the Revolutionary army. Slaves, many serving in their owner s
place, were promised freedom in return for their service. There were
several black regiments like the Rhode Island Regiment and
Massachusetts "Bucks of America," but most African Americans served in
integrated units, the last integrated American army units until the
Korean War in the 1950s.
Thus, African Americans in search of freedom from slavery served on both
sides during the Revolution. As a result of the Revolution, the
population of free blacks in the United States increased-from about
25,000 in 1776 to nearly 60,000 when the first federal census was
conducted in 1790.
B The Ideals of the Revolution  Slavery was important to American
patriots. It was the opposite of liberty and served as a benchmark
against which they measured their own freedom. They continually warned
that they would not be denied their rights, saying they must not be the
"slaves" of England. The ideals of the Revolution emphasized the
incompatibility of slavery in a free land, and slaves petitioned for
their freedom using the words of the Declaration of Independence.
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.
VI THE CONCENTRATION OF SLAVERY IN THE SOUTH ÂÂ
In the North the rhetoric of the Revolution proved a powerful argument
against slavery. Starting with Vermont in 1777, one Northern state after
another either abolished slavery outright or passed gradual emancipation
laws that freed slave children as they reached adulthood. Although
abolition faced stiff opposition in areas of New York, Rhode Island, and
New Jersey, where slavery was most economically significant, by the
mid-1820s virtually all the slaves in the United States were in the
Southern states. These states were becoming more dependent on slave
labor as cotton became an important plantation crop.
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.
On large 19th-century cotton plantations, slaves usually worked in
groups called gangs headed by slave drivers. The driver, who was
generally a slave selected for intelligence and leadership ability,
directly supervised the field laborers. Gangs worked the crop rows,
plowing, planting, cultivating, or picking, depending on the season.
Unlike those under the task system, these slaves had little control over
their work schedule beyond the rhythm of the work songs that regulated
the pace of their work.
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.
VII FREE BLACK POPULATION  A Discrimination Faced by Free Blacks ÂÂ
The first federal census in 1790 recorded nearly 60,000 free blacks,
compared to more than 690,000 who lived in slavery. Although most
African Americans lived in the South (about 90 percent), 27,000 lived in
the North. South and North, free blacks tended to concentrate in urban
areas, since cities afforded employment opportunities, greater freedom
of movement, and larger concentrations of people to support churches,
schools, and other organizations.
However, African Americans faced many obstacles and prejudices not
encountered by whites, even in areas where slavery had been abolished.
They were barred from most educational institutions, limited to the
least desirable residential and farming areas, often prohibited from
practicing trades and opening businesses, and generally segregated in
public conveyances and public worship. Except in a few New England
states where their numbers were small, black voting was restricted. In
many states, especially in the Midwest, they could not serve on juries
or testify against whites in court.
Indiana, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Iowa prohibited black immigration, and
Illinois threatened bondage for blacks who attempted to locate there
permanently. In 1807 Ohio passed a series of "black codes" requiring
free blacks to post a $500 bond assuring their good conduct and
self-support before they could settle in the state. Although these
restrictive laws were irregularly enforced, free blacks lived under
their constant threat.
African Americans job opportunities were always restricted, and poverty
was a continuing problem. Ironically, black skilled artisans were more
likely to find employment in the South than in Northern cities where
they faced competition from European immigrants. Most free black men in
the North worked as servants, as day laborers finding temporary work
where they could, or as sailors aboard trading ships or whalers. Black
women most often worked as maids, laundresses, or cooks in homes,
hotels, restaurants, or other businesses.
B Free Black Communities ÂÂ
As early as the 1780s, African Americans in Northern cities established
hundreds of mutual aid societies, churches, and fraternal organizations.
Cooperative organizations provided benefits for burials and support for
widows, orphans, the sick, and the unemployed. This aid was generally
denied to blacks by white charitable societies. One of the first
examples was the Free African Society, which was founded by Richard
Allen and Absalom Jones in 1787. The same year Prince Hall organized the
African Masonic Lodge in Boston, and lodges of Prince Hall Masons were
soon found in Philadelphia, New York City, and throughout Massachusetts
and Rhode Island.
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 Methodist Episcopal Church and named Richard
Allen the first bishop of this association. Other early black churches
included New York s African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church (1796) and
the Abyssinian Baptist Church (1808), and Boston s African Baptist
Church (1805).
C Early Abolitionist Efforts ÂÂ
By the 1830s, black communities had many groups organized specifically
to oppose slavery and promote racial advancement. Schools and literary
societies were common in the urban North, and virtually all black
organizations were dedicated to abolishing slavery. In 1830 communities
began sending delegates to an annual national Negro convention where
they discussed strategies for abolition and racial advancement.
Although African Americans also worked with white allies in integrated
antislavery organizations, they were determined to let their own voices
be heard. They published political and historical pamphlets such as
David Walker s militant Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World
(1829). In 1827 John Russwurm and Samuel Cornish founded the first black
owned and operated newspaper, Freedom’s Journal, in New York. Ten
years later Cornish became editor of the New York newspaper, Colored
American.
Continuing discrimination and legal restrictions on social and political
rights prompted some African Americans to leave the United States. Some
emigrated to Africa, going to places such as the British African colony
of Sierra Leone and Liberia, an area settled by freed American slaves.
Other destinations included the West Indies, Mexico, or Europe. Paul
Cuffe, a wealthy African American and Native American sea captain and
shipbuilder from Massachusetts, promoted colonization in Sierra Leone
and took a group of black settlers there in 1815. In 1816 the American
Colonization Society was formed to resettle free blacks and freed slaves
in Africa. White slaveholders were among its leaders, and most African
Americans were suspicious, rejecting their overtures. Still, by 1827,
the Society had taken over 1400 volunteers, mostly free blacks from the
upper South, to Liberia.
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.
VIII ABOLITIONIST MOVEMENT ÂÂ
The antislavery cause gained much more visibility in 1831 when white
Boston newspaper editor William Lloyd Garrison and his newspaper, The
Liberator, joined African Americans in demanding the immediate abolition
of slavery. Though he was a pacifist, in 1831 Garrison published in his
paper excerpts from Walker s Appeal, including its call for slave
revolt. That summer a revolt led by Nat Turner, a slave, killed more
than 50 whites in Virginia and increased slaveholders conviction that
such antislavery propaganda was dangerous. Southern states and local
areas offered rewards for Walker, Garrison, and Garrison’s publisher
and newspaper agents, and prohibited the paper s circulation. Later that
year, Walker died suddenly at his shop in Boston; many suspected foul
play.
A Antislavery Societies ÂÂ
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.
Members of the AASS contended that the Constitution was a proslavery
document. Therefore, they argued that slavery could not be fought with
political strategies; it must be destroyed through moral arguments.
Other members of the AASS wanted to work through political parties, even
if it meant striking compromises with proslavery forces. They were also
uneasy about Garrison s attacks on most churches for failing to speak
out against slavery and his insistence on the full participation of
women. In 1840 some abolitionists withdrew from the AASS and formed the
American and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society. They announced their support
for a new political party called the Liberty Party, which was founded in
1839.
Many other activists eventually supported working through political
organizations to abolish slavery, including the most famous antislavery
orator, Frederick Douglass. Douglass had escaped from slavery in 1838
and worked passionately for the antislavery cause. He joined other men
and women, such as Sojourner Truth and Charles Lenox Remond, who
traveled throughout the North testifying against slavery and organizing
moral and political opposition. Abolitionist women commonly organized
fairs and concerts to raise funds for antislavery work.
B Underground Railroad ÂÂ
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 crew of the ship, the Amistad, and captured the vessel.
Attempting to return the ship to Africa, they were eventually taken into
custody by American officials off the coast of Long Island, New York,
and charged with piracy and murder. Antislavery forces convinced former
President John Quincy Adams to defend them and publicized their plight
in newspapers and public meetings. Black communities and antislavery
activists mobilized to raise funds, producing a play in New York,
selling portraits of the leader of the captured Africans, Joseph Cinque,
and holding antislavery events. After appeals, the Supreme Court finally
freed those Africans who survived their two-year imprisonment on the
grounds that they had been kidnapped in an illegal slave trade and had
acted in self-defense.
During the 1840s black abolitionists became increasingly impatient with
their slow progress and determined to widen the antislavery struggle.
New Yorker David Ruggles called for slave uprisings in the pages of the
Liberator in 1841. Black leaders began to more openly support violence
to protect fugitives from being returned to slavery. But the growing
power of the proslavery forces was signaled at the end of the decade
when Texas joined the Union as a slave state.
IX THE CRITICAL DECADE OF THE 1850S ÂÂ
Growing conflict between Southern slaveholding interests and Northern
antislavery activists prompted Congress to negotiate the Compromise of
1850. The act satisfied the antislavery factions on some points such as
admitting California as a free state and abolishing slave trading in the
nation s capital. However, it appeased the proslavery factions by
including a new law to protect slaveholders recovery of escaped slaves.
A Fugitive Slave Act ÂÂ
The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 was much stronger than an earlier 1793
fugitive slave law. Armed with a legal affidavit describing the
fugitive, a slaveowner or his representative need only convince a
federal commissioner that a captive was his property. No court or trial
was necessary, and no defense was guaranteed. Particularly infuriating
to blacks and other abolitionists was the provision that compelled
bystanders to assist in captures or face fines and imprisonment.
Antislavery forces organized vigilance committees to protect fugitive
slaves from the increased danger, and many were rescued from
slavecatchers. For example, abolitionists spirited William and Ellen
Craft out of Boston and sent them to England; a group of blacks burst
into a Boston hearing room, freed Shadrach Minkins (known in Boston as
Fred Wilkins) and carried him to Canada; a crowd in Syracuse overwhelmed
jail guards and freed Jerry McHenry. There were also many unsuccessful
rescue attempts, such as the cases of Thomas Sims in 1851 and Anthony
Burns in 1854, both of whom were returned to slavery after reaching
Boston. Such events generated public sympathy for the antislavery cause.
Resistance to the federal law in Boston was so strong that 2000 soldiers
were required to escort Anthony Burns to the ship that returned him to
Virginia.
B Dred Scott Case ÂÂ
Black anger and pessimism increased in 1857 when the Supreme Court ruled
in the Dred Scott case. Scott, a slave, had sued for freedom based on
his having lived with his master for two years in the free territory of
present-day Minnesota. In a major victory for slaveholders, the Court
not only refused Scott’s petition for freedom but declared that blacks
were not American citizens. Further, it decided that Congress could not
bar slavery from the Western territories.
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.
X THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR ÂÂ
At the start of the American Civil War (1861-1865), most white Americans
in the North were not willing to fight to end Southern slavery. They
fought instead to preserve the Union and prevent slavery from spreading
into the Western territories. Many opposed expanding slave territory
because they believed that slaves were unfair competition to free labor.
Many Southerners fought to protect and expand slavery because they
believed that limiting slavery would lead to its destruction. Even most
Southerners who did not own slaves considered slavery the essential
foundation of "the Southern way of life." "This country without slave
labor would be completely worthless," one soldier from Mississippi
argued. Even though most owned no slaves, they would "fight forever," an
Alabama soldier vowed, "rather than submit to freeing Negroes among us."
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 ÂÂ
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.
But when the war ended, the national government had not yet determined
how best to reunite the country. Views on how to treat the defeated
Confederacy varied. Some people felt that the South could be reconciled
with the Union by simply acknowledging the abolition of slavery, while
others were convinced that the region’s social, economic, and
political systems would have to be thoroughly reconstructed.
President Johnson, a Democrat from Tennessee, advocated leniency for the
South. He granted amnesty freely to Southern whites, and his only
requirement for readmitting a state to the Union was the adoption of a
state constitution that outlawed slavery and disavowed secession.
Encouraged by Johnson, Southern planters maintained much of their
political power and passed black codes to restrict blacks’ land
ownership and freedom of movement.
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.â€Â
In March 1867 Congress passed the Reconstruction Act which was
strengthened by three supplemental acts later the same year and in 1868.
The Reconstruction acts divided the former ten Confederate states into
five military districts, each headed by a federal military commander.
This created a federal military occupation of the former Confederate
states. (Tennessee was exempt because it had ratified the 14th Amendment
and was considered reconstructed.) Before applying for readmission to
the Union, the Southern states were required to ratify the 14th
Amendment and revise their constitutions to ensure that blacks had
citizenship rights, including the right to vote.
In 1870 the states ratified the 15th Amendment. This amendment
prohibited the denial of the right to vote based on race. Finally,
Congress passed the Civil Rights Act of 1875, which forbade racial
discrimination in “inns, public conveyances on land or water,
theaters, and other places of amusement.â€Â
Federal occupation temporarily extended democracy in the South, assuring
former slaves the vote and thereby enabling them to elect black leaders
to political office. In states with the largest black populations,
African Americans and their white Republican allies established and
improved public education for white and black students, ended property
qualifications for voting, abolished imprisonment for debt, and
integrated public facilities.
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.
In addition, hundreds of African Americans were elected to state and
local offices in the South. In South Carolina, African Americans were
almost 60 percent of the population, and at times they held the offices
of lieutenant governor, secretary of state, treasurer, and speaker of
the house. Although no state elected a black governor, Louisiana s
lieutenant governor, P.B.S. Pinchback, who had once been denied a seat
in the U.S. Senate, served as acting governor after the white governor
was removed from office on charges of corruption.
Southern Democrats were determined to restore conservative Southern
government. They charged Republican officials, especially blacks, with
corruption. They cited rising taxes as evidence of wasteful spending. In
reality, however, taxes rose as services such as public education were
instituted for the first time or expanded in the South. The political
corruption that characterized this era was led primarily by Northern
business interests exploiting the government for their own ends, not by
black Southern politicians.
To regain power in state governments, Southern Democrats used violence
to keep black voters away from the polls. Throughout Reconstruction, the
Ku Klux Klan and other white supremacist groups conducted terrorist
attacks on African Americans and their allies to limit Republican
political power and restrict black opportunities. Hundreds of blacks
were killed for attempting to vote, for challenging segregation, for
organizing workers, or even for attending school. In 1871 President
Ulysses S. Grant declared martial law in nine South Carolina counties
because of the proliferation of lynchings and beatings. In 1873 white
terrorists massacred more than 60 blacks on Easter Sunday in Colfax,
Louisiana, and killed 60 Republicans, both blacks and whites, during the
summer of 1874 in nearby Coushatta. They killed 75 Republicans in
Vicksburg, Mississippi in December 1874.
Even as Reconstruction ended, blacks continued to make some gains. In
1877 former slave and abolitionist, John Mercer Langston, became U.S.
minister to Haiti, and Frederick Douglass served as federal marshal of
the District of Columbia. During the late 1870s and the 1880s, several
additional black colleges founded in the South joined Howard University
in Washington, D.C., Morehouse College in Georgia, and Morgan State
University in Maryland in broadening educational opportunities for black
students. In 1888 Capital Savings Bank of Washington, D.C., opened as
the first African American bank in the United States, and others
followed in Richmond, Virginia; Birmingham, Alabama; and elsewhere in
the South.
XII EROSION OF BLACK RIGHTS ÂÂ
Reconstruction came to an end gradually, as Democrats took over state
governments from Republicans. In the last three states, South Carolina,
Florida, and Louisiana, Reconstruction ended as part of an apparent
political compromise. Both Democrats and Republicans claimed victory in
those states in the elections of 1876. However, leaders of the national
Republican Party agreed to recognize Democratic claims to state offices
in return for receiving the electoral votes of those states for
Republican presidential candidate Rutherford B. Hayes, who thereby won
the election.
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 waysâ€â€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.
A Emigration from the South ÂÂ
By the late 1870s much of the optimism of emancipation had faded to the
reality of the post-Reconstruction South. Thousands of blacks, landless
and poor, decided to leave the South. In 1878 over 200 blacks sailed
from Charleston harbor for Liberia in Africa. Many others decided to
move west to the new territories that had been opened to settlement. In
the "Exodus of 1879," sometimes called the Exoduster Movement, almost
20,000 blacks left Mississippi and Louisiana for the frontiers of
Kansas, Nebraska, Colorado, and Oklahoma. They established a number of
all-black towns like Langston, Oklahoma, and Nicodemus, Kansas, planted
farms, settled in cities, and worked in mines.
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
throughout the West. In 1856 Beckwourth had published his memoirs
entitled Life and Adventures of James P. Beckwourth, Mountaineer, Scout,
and Pioneer. Some African Americans went west with the U.S. military, as
part of the all-black Ninth and Tenth Cavalry Units that Native
Americans called Buffalo Soldiers. Others went with wagon trains or as
cowboys, moving cattle to market.
B Jim Crow Laws ÂÂ
The 1880s witnessed a profusion of segregationist legislation,
separating blacks and whites. The system of Southern segregation was
often called the Jim Crow system, after an 1830s minstrel show
character. This character, a black slave, embodied negative stereotypes
of blacks. One after another, Southern states passed laws segregating
blacks and restricting African American rights in almost every
conceivable way. For example, Tennessee initiated segregated seating on
railroad cars in 1881. Florida (1887), Mississippi (1888), and Texas
(1889) followed. In Alabama, laws prohibited blacks and whites from
playing checkers together; in Louisiana, statutes ordered that there be
separate entrances for blacks and whites at circuses. All Southern
states prohibited interracial marriages.
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.
C Sharecropping  Reconstruction failed to eliminate black economic
dependency largely because it did not provide African Americans with the
land they needed to be independent. During the war, former slaves
believed that they had earned the right to abandoned or confiscated
Confederate lands through generations of uncompensated labor. Holding
land might bring economic independence, and initially, it seemed as if
the government might support their claim.
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.
By the 1880s a majority of former slaves had become sharecroppers, often
working land that belonged to their former masters for a share of the
profits. As Republicans in the South were driven from office or killed
by terrorists, sharecroppers were left without protection and were
frequently cheated by white landowners. Laws forced debtors to work the
land until debts were paid, and landowners often manipulated credit to
insure that sharecroppers ended each year in debt. Those who questioned
the landowner’s accounting might be arrested for bad debt. Those
convicted were often leased out to work on the same plantation, but
without wages. Landowners in need of laborers might have local police
invoke vagrancy laws against blacks who refused low-paying jobs.
D Increased Disfranchisement ÂÂ
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.
As Democrats reasserted political authority in the South, African
Americans had few legal or humanitarian protections. Throughout
Reconstruction, blacks were hanged without formal charge or trial. The
reported lynchings increased from about 50 a year in the early 1880s, to
about 75 a year in the mid-1880s, and averaging well over 100 a year
during the 1890s. Between 1890 and 1900 more than 1200 African American
men and women were lynched in the United States. Thus, by the end of the
19th century, Southern black people lived under the constant threat of
terrorism, were denied access to public facilities supported by their
taxes, were relegated to the worst schools, and labored under an unjust
economic system enforced by discriminatory laws.
XIII AFRICAN AMERICAN RESPONSES  A Rise of Populism  In the 1890s
black farmers and white farmers, joined by common poverty and unjust
treatment from wealthy planters and business interests, attempted to
construct an interracial political alliance. This populist movement (see
Populism) organized a political party, the People’s Party, and
recruited blacks, some of whom were still voting in the mid-1890s. The
party advocated political equality, and white populist leaders such as
Georgia’s Tom Watson spoke out against the poll tax and other measures
that discriminated against blacks. African Americans saw the populists
as potential allies against the racism that threatened their rights, and
many risked their lives to campaign for populist candidates. Black
minister H.T. Dole gave 63 speeches on behalf of Watson; in Georgia, 15
black populists were killed during the state elections of 1892. Some
white populists saw African Americans as allies in their campaign to
take power from Southern Democrats and elected blacks to positions in
the People’s Party.
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 ÂÂ
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.
Washington s school was remarkably successful, considering the racially
hostile atmosphere. His accommodationist stance made him one of the most
influential African Americans among powerful whites during the late 19th
and early 20th century, but many blacks resented his seeming willingness
to accept without protest the deprivation of African American rights.
Many college-educated blacks disagreed with Washington and pursued
equality through political and social protest. Ida B. Wells, Mary Church
Terrell, William Monroe Trotter, and W.E.B. Du Bois were among those who
established such all-black groups as the African American Council, the
Niagara Movement, and in 1909, the interracial National Association for
the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). They demanded their civil
rights and worked against the Jim Crow system of segregation through the
courts and, where possible, through politics.
XIV BLACK CULTURE IN THE EARLY 20TH CENTURY ÂÂ
During the last quarter of the 19th century, black urban societies in
the South grew as many agricultural workers sought work and the relative
safety of the city. Black women in particular found jobs as domestics in
the homes of the growing white middle class. A few African Americans
found work in the new Southern textile mills and tobacco factories, but
most of those jobs were reserved for whites. Generally, Southern blacks
in the cities, like those in rural areas, teetered on the edge of
poverty, although such Southern cities as Washington, D.C., Baltimore,
New Orleans, Memphis, and Atlanta had small but significant black middle
class communities.
As black urban communities grew, they offered a broader range of social
institutions and educational opportunities. Cities attracted many blacks
who had been educated at Howard, Fisk, Atlanta, Hampton, and other black
colleges established during the 19th century. The growth in the size and
literacy of the urban black populace stimulated cultural and
intellectual activity. Blacks published newspapers and magazines in all
substantial African American communities.
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.
XV THE GREAT MIGRATION ÂÂ
During the first decade of the 20th century, the infestation of Southern
cotton crops by insects called boll weevils diminished production and
curtailed the need for farm labor. Growing unemployment and increasing
racial violence encouraged blacks to leave the South. Soon after, in
1914, World War I broke out in Europe. Although the United States did
not enter the war until 1917, its factories supplied the combatants.
American industry needed labor, and the war slowed European immigration.
In response, Northern manufacturers recruited Southern black workers to
fill factory jobs. From 1910 to 1930 between 1.5 million and 2 million
African Americans left the South for the industrial cities of the North.
By 1930 more than 200,000 blacks had moved to New York, about 180,000 to
Chicago, and more than 130,000 to Philadelphia.
The sudden influx of newcomers to established Northern black communities
brought not only new vitality but also new problems. Tensions grew
between long-time black residents and the new emigrants, who were
generally poor and sometimes illiterate. Cheap taverns and dance halls
sprang up to cater to them, and they established new churches (often
storefront quarters) that rivaled older more traditional black churches.
As black communities in Northern cities grew, black working people
became the clientele for an expanding black professional and business
class, gaining in political and economic power. This new black
leadership replaced traditional leaders whose status often depended on
their connection to influential whites. New leaders were more likely to
have power based in the black communities and were freer to express a
sense of racial pride and solidarity with working class African
Americans.
Under these conditions, many social conflicts gradually gave way to an
increasing sense of racial pride and social cohesion. While Jim Crow
laws and political terrorism continued to discourage blacks from voting
in the South, African Americans in Northern cities became an important
political force. Black fraternal orders, political organizations, social
clubs, and newspapers asserted an urban consciousness that became the
foundation for the militancy and African American cultural innovations
of the 1920s.
XVI WORLD WAR I ÂÂ
With America’s entrance into World War I the military needs drained
manpower from Northern industries. Increasing job vacancies enticed more
black migrants to urban industrial centers, and for the first time,
substantial numbers of black women held industrial jobs. Thousands of
black women worked in industrial plants producing goods for the war
effort and for a growing domestic consumer market. Most appreciated the
higher pay and greater autonomy compared to domestic work. As black
communities in the North grew, so did opportunities for blacks, more of
whom became politicians, newspaper publishers, real estate brokers,
insurance agents, lawyers, and teachers, serving the black communities.
African Americans also went to war; approximately 400,000 black soldiers
served in the armed forces. Over half of the African American men who
served in the war were stationed in France. They served in segregated
units, and most were assigned as cooks, laborers, cargo handlers, or to
other noncombat support positions, but some black regiments saw
extensive combat duty. Some black regiments were recognized for their
achievements; the entire 369th regimentâ€â€along with some members of the
370th, 371st, and 372nd regimentsâ€â€was awarded the Croix de Guerre by
France for distinguished service.
Despite their demonstrated military proficiency and bravery, black
soldiers were insulted and harassed by white soldiers. Some American
military officials attempted to establish the Jim Crow system in France.
General John Pershing, commander of the Allied forces, issued a document
called "Secret Information Concerning the Black American Troops.†This
document warned French military leaders against treating black soldiers
as equals, but French people were unconcerned about such American
practices and often welcomed black soldiers as heroes.
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.
XVII THE POSTWAR YEARS ÂÂ
As African American veterans returned home, white opposition to wartime
gains intensified. In 1917 a white mob invaded the black community in
East Saint Louis, Illinois, and killed hundreds of African Americans.
During the same year, the U.S. Army summarily court-martialed a group of
black soldiers and hanged 13 without the benefit of an appeal after a
black battalion rioted in reaction to white harassment in Houston,
Texas. After the war, many black soldiers in uniform were attacked or
killed by whites attempting to enforce racial domination. During the
"Red Summer" of 1919, antiblack riots occurred in scores of cities
including Longview, Texas; Washington, D.C.; and Chicago, Illinois.
These attacks continued into the 1920s and made African Americans even
more determined to militantly defend their rights.
College-educated blacks were still few in number, but they generally
provided articulate political and cultural leadership. Black leaders
were united in believing that blacks’ wartime sacrifices entitled them
to first-class citizenship. Younger African Americans exemplified a
militant “New Negro†who demanded respect and full equality from
America and refused to take no for an answer.
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.
A The Harlem Renaissance ÂÂ
Marcus Garvey’s career was part of the growth in racial pride and
awareness that characterized the 1920s. During this period Harlem, a
neighborhood in New York City, became the North s largest and the
world s best-known African American community. It was the home of the
Harlem Renaissance, a black cultural community of intellectuals, poets,
novelists, actors, musicians, and painters. This community included
Alain Locke, a Harvard graduate and Rhodes scholar, who was one of
several black academics who promoted African American and African
culture. Other important figures were Zora Neale Hurston, Langston
Hughes, and Claude McKay. Their work was publicized by white patrons and
black newspaper and magazine editors and found a wide audience in the
United States and Europe. Although Harlem was the most widely known
center of U.S. black culture, the cultural renaissance flourished in
other cities with substantial black populations such as Chicago,
Philadelphia, and Washington, D.C.
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.
B The Great Depression ÂÂ
The African American cultural renaissance lost momentum in the 1930s as
people focused on the Great Depression, a worldwide economic downturn
that began in 1929. Even before the depression, unemployment and poverty
among blacks were high, but the economic downturn devastated black
communities. The economy was bad for everyoneâ€â€17 percent of whites
could not support themselves by 1934. Yet, 38 percent of African
Americans were unable to support themselves by that year because large
numbers of blacks were often fired to make room for unemployed white
workers. African Americans lost their jobs at a much higher rate than
whites and remained out of work longer. In some black communities 80
percent of the people were on relief, receiving surplus food, clothing,
and other aid from the government, and black unemployment ranged as high
as 60 percent.
These statistics translated into a falling standard of living for
African Americans that was more drastic than for their fellow white
citizens. The median annual black family income in Harlem dropped by
nearly half between 1929 and 1932, and wage levels were lower for blacks
than for whites. Businesses took advantage of the situation. One
Philadelphia laundry, for example, advertised for black female workers
at $9 to $10 weekly and for white female workers at $12. At the same
time, Harlem landlords could charge rents of $12 to $30 a month, higher
than comparable housing elsewhere, because Harlem was one of the