Jim Crow Laws: How Were They Sustained In The Segregation South

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How did Jim Crow laws come about, how were they sustained in the segregated south (Pre & Post Plessy vs Ferguson) 1865 - 1965? The short and long-term issues that hindered Blacks’ civil rights progress in America. Jim Crow laws refer to laws passed by states mainly in the South that restricted the progress of Blacks. It is a culmination of White fears and hatred of Blacks assumably because of perceived threat of Blacks reversing the status quo in America. The signing of the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863 by Lincoln started the abolition of slavery, when the Civil War ended in 1865, all Blacks were free in the South. The Civil War was about ending slavery in the South, in which White Southerners were not ready to conclude. The Freedmen’s Bureau was called upon to establish law and order for free Blacks during the era called Reconstruction with the anticipation of southern White resistance. How did Jim Crow laws come about, how were they sustained in the segregated south?…show more content…
White southerners enacted Black Codes or special laws to circumvent the progress of freed slaves. Although radical Republicans in Congress passed laws to ensure Blacks political freedom, they were incensed that southern states had instituted a racial caste system. White racist terrorist groups like the Klu Klux Klan created in 1866, became the most infamous, used fear and violence on Blacks and White sympathizers. Reconstruction ended in 1877, but Jim Crow laws came into effect because it was policies that were put into the law books that no longer needed to be
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