Jim Crow Laws
Jim Crow laws kept African Americans and whites from mixing in the South in public places.
Jim Crow was still very alive in the south and the North was about change and more equal opportunities.
the south, where the Jim crow laws were in effect
Jim Crow laws
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One example of a Jim Crow law passed in the South is the "separate but equal" doctrine, which allowed for racial segregation in public facilities such as schools, transportation, and restaurants based on the belief that facilities for African Americans could be separate as long as they were equal to those for white people.
Jim Crow laws
Local and state laws that were passed to take away African-American rights, in the South, were referred to as Jim Crow laws. There were dozens of these laws passed in the 1950s and 1960s.
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Laws passed in the South following the Civil War that enforced segregation.kimberly compos
laws passed in the south following the Civil War that enforced segregation
. . . . . . . . . .They were called Jim Crow laws. The name's origin from a black character that was popular in entertainment acts during the mid-1800s, whose name was "Jim Crow".- S0L. . . . . . . . . .
Jim Crow laws
Jim Crow laws
Jim Crow laws were laws that were passed in the south after the civil war that separated white and black people in public and private facilities. Laws like this lost African Americans their voting rights in Southern states. It got its name from a minstrel-show character who sang a comic song ending in the words, "Jump, Jim Crow."