Colonization Archives - AA-Historics Itesva https://www.aahistoricsitesva.org African Americans in America Wed, 14 Jun 2023 13:39:24 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.9.1 https://www.aahistoricsitesva.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/cropped-man-1-32x32.png Colonization Archives - AA-Historics Itesva https://www.aahistoricsitesva.org 32 32 The Struggle and Triumph of African Americans in America https://www.aahistoricsitesva.org/the-struggle-and-triumph-of-african-americans-in-america/ Wed, 14 Jun 2023 13:39:20 +0000 https://www.aahistoricsitesva.org/?p=361 Since the inception of America, African Americans have faced a long and tumultuous journey in the land of the free. From slavery to segregation, discrimination…

The post The Struggle and Triumph of African Americans in America appeared first on AA-Historics Itesva.

]]>
0 0
Read Time:3 Minute, 40 Second

Since the inception of America, African Americans have faced a long and tumultuous journey in the land of the free. From slavery to segregation, discrimination to police brutality, the history of African Americans in America is a complex and multifaceted story of struggle and triumph. Despite facing systemic oppression, African Americans have made significant contributions to American culture, politics, and society. Through the Civil Rights Movement and beyond, African Americans have fought tirelessly for their rights and equality, and continue to do so today. This article will explore the history of African Americans in America and the ongoing struggle for justice and equality.

Slavery was a pervasive part of the American experience, with African Americans forming the majority of the enslaved population. African Americans endured centuries of oppression, including brutal physical abuse, economic exploitation, and social degradation. During the Civil War, many African Americans escaped slavery and fled to Union lines, though they still faced racism and legal inequality under the Jim Crow laws of the late 19th century.

A Tale of Two Americas: The Journey of African Americans in America

America has been a land of opportunities and dreams for many people, but not everyone has had the chance to experience the same level of freedom and equality. African Americans have been an integral part of America’s history, contributing to its culture, heritage, and economy. However, their journey has been marked by struggles, discrimination, and injustices. From the time of slavery to the civil rights movement, African Americans have fought for their rights and dignity in America. This article explores the journey of African Americans in America, their struggles, achievements, and the challenges that they still face in the present-day.

African Americans Shaping America: Past, Present, and Future

For centuries, African Americans have been an integral part of shaping America’s history, culture, and identity. From the horrors of slavery to the Civil Rights Movement, African Americans have fought tirelessly for their rights and freedoms, contributing to the fabric of America’s society. Today, African Americans continue to face challenges and discrimination, but also make significant contributions to various fields such as politics, entertainment, and sports. This topic explores the past, present, and future of African Americans in America, highlighting their resilience, achievements, and ongoing struggles for equality and justice.

African Americans in America: A History of Struggle and Triumphs in the Land of the Free

The history of African Americans in America is a complex and often painful tale of struggle and triumph. From the horrors of slavery to the civil rights movement, African Americans have faced countless obstacles in their quest for equality and justice. Despite these challenges, they have also made significant contributions to American society in fields ranging from literature and music to politics and sports. This article will explore the complex relationship between African Americans and America, highlighting both the challenges they have faced and the victories they have won.

A Historical and Cultural Perspective

African Americans have played a significant role in shaping America’s history and culture. From the days of slavery to the civil rights movement and beyond, African Americans have contributed to the growth and development of the nation in countless ways. This article explores the impact of African Americans on America from a historical and cultural perspective. We will delve into the struggles and triumphs of African Americans throughout the years, examining how they have influenced the nation’s politics, music, art, literature, and more. By exploring the intersection of African American history and American culture, we can gain a deeper understanding of the complex and vibrant tapestry that makes up this great nation.

The Evolution of African Americans in America: A Journey Through the Country’s Complex History

African Americans have played a significant role in shaping the history of America, a country that has been built on the foundations of diversity, freedom, and democracy. The history of African Americans in America is a complex one, marked by centuries of slavery, segregation, and discrimination. Despite the challenges they have faced, African Americans have made tremendous contributions to the country’s culture, politics, and economy. This article aims to provide an overview of the evolution of African Americans in America, from their arrival as slaves to their fight for civil rights and beyond. Through examining their struggles and successes, we can gain a deeper understanding of the country’s history and the ongoing quest for equality and justice.

Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %

The post The Struggle and Triumph of African Americans in America appeared first on AA-Historics Itesva.

]]>
The Bus and Martin Luther King https://www.aahistoricsitesva.org/the-bus-and-martin-luther-king/ Tue, 01 Feb 2022 12:21:34 +0000 https://themepalacedemo.com/fairtimes/?p=108 Since the mid-1950s, the struggle for equal rights between whites and blacks has been a mass phenomenon. In 1955, Rosa Parks, 42, in Montgomery, Alabama,

The post The Bus and Martin Luther King appeared first on AA-Historics Itesva.

]]>
0 0
Read Time:3 Minute, 21 Second

Since the mid-1950s, the struggle for equal rights between whites and blacks has been a mass phenomenon. In 1955, Rosa Parks, 42, in Montgomery, Alabama, refused to give up her seat on the bus to a white passenger and was attacked. After that, the black population boycotted all city transportation for a year. And Parks became one of the symbols of the struggle for equality.

The postwar generation of Americans wanted many more freedoms. It invented and borrowed peaceful protests, in which tens and hundreds of thousands of people participated. Equality was one of their main themes.

The human rights activist and preacher Martin Luther King organized several such non-violent actions – and won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964 for it.

In 1962, there were mass riots in Mississippi – black resident James Meredith tried several times to enroll at the local university, but he was rejected. His case was heard by the U.S. Supreme Court – and decided to enroll him. The state authorities refused to comply with this decision, and the ensuing unrest led to the state declaring martial law and introducing the National Guard. In 2006, a monument to James Meredith appeared at the university.

In 1965, riots broke out in the Los Angeles suburb of Watts after police arrested the entire family of a young man suspected of driving while intoxicated. The riots lasted a week, 34 people were killed and more than a thousand were injured.

In 1967, a similar story happened in Detroit, mass riots lasted five days, 43 people were killed, police arrested 7,200 people.

On April 4, 1968, the American human rights activist and preacher Martin Luther King – the main fighter for the rights of blacks in those years – was shot dead in Memphis. Protests and acts of defiance took place all over the country.

Thanks to the 1960s movement, the first generation of black politicians emerged in the United States. Segregation was officially ended, but inequality, including economic inequality, persisted.

For a hundred years after the formal abolition of slavery, oppression existed in equally heinous and atrocious forms.

Why did it explode in the 1960s? Several serious reasons at once. Rosa Parks was being poisoned by dogs, and this particularly angered Jewish youth and rabbis – too direct an association with Nazism and concentration camps. Thus the equality movement gained new supporters.

And in general, the demand for change in society increased dramatically.

Southern newspapers were controlled by corrupt politicians who no one wanted to mess with. They were elected almost for life, dominated the House Finance Committee for years. But television came along – and made America more open.

Americans began to borrow and adopt forms of non-violent protest – not everyone was ready to clash with armed police.

Finally, the Cold War factor kicked in. Americans positioned themselves as leaders of the free world, and they were uncomfortable with such atavism as segregation at home. And politicians – first John F. Kennedy and then his successor Lyndon Johnson – took a strong stand, despite Southern opposition.

The hatred of Kennedy in the South was enormous – he was killed there, in Texas. But Johnson continued his cause, and in 1964 the Civil Rights Act was passed, ending segregation.

Of course, black people could breathe easier, they were no longer treated as second-class citizens. But they did not get much economically either. Poverty alleviation programs began. Everyone who was unemployed received welfare, the welfare rollover, and it turned out to be a very insidious thing.

Already in the early 1970s, sociologists, conservative sociologists, so to speak, began to cite studies that the welfare check led to the degradation of society. People were artificially financially boosted, they were not motivated to work.

There was an education preference law: black children were sent to white schools. Only parents in Boston, for example, almost revolted over this.

These were extremely difficult and traumatic steps forward – I guess you could see it that way now. It lasted from the 1970s to the present day.

Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %

The post The Bus and Martin Luther King appeared first on AA-Historics Itesva.

]]>
The Struggle for Rights. https://www.aahistoricsitesva.org/the-struggle-for-rights/ Thu, 18 Nov 2021 12:12:05 +0000 https://themepalacedemo.com/fairtimes/?p=106 During the XVIII century there were at least 150 slave revolts. Almost every plantation had its own storehouse of weapons and maintained security detachments in case of danger.

The post The Struggle for Rights. appeared first on AA-Historics Itesva.

]]>
0 0
Read Time:2 Minute, 22 Second

During the XVIII century there were at least 150 slave revolts. Almost every plantation had its own storehouse of weapons and maintained security detachments in case of danger. One of the largest uprisings occurred in 1739, when more than 200 slaves managed to destroy several dozen houses, burn most of the crops and kill several planters.

In 1936-1938, American writers, members of the so-called Federal Writing Project, were commissioned by the government to record interviews with former slaves who were by then more than 80 years old. The result was the publication of The Collected Stories of Ex-Slaves, which recounted people’s varied experiences-some were luckier than others.

“They didn’t teach us anything and they didn’t let us learn anything ourselves. If they saw us learning to read and write, they cut off our hands. They wouldn’t let us go to church either. Sometimes we would run away and pray together in an old house with an earthen floor. There we would rejoice and shout, and no one could hear us, because the earthen floor was muffled, and one man stood in the doorway. We were not allowed to visit anyone, and I saw Jim Dawson, Iverson Dawson’s father, tied to four stakes. They put him on his stomach and stretched his arms out to his sides, and they tied one arm to one stake and the other to another. His legs were also stretched out to the sides and tied to the stakes. And then they started beating them with a board, the kind they put on the roof. The niggers then came there at night and carried him home on a sheet, but he didn’t die. They accused him of going to a neighboring plantation at night. At nine o’clock we all had to be at home. The older man would come in and yell: “Stand down! Stand down! Everybody go home and lock your doors!” And if anyone didn’t go, they’d beat him,” says 91-year-old George Young (Livingston, Alabama).

And here’s a recollection by Niecy Pugh (85, Mobile, Alabama): “Life for Negroes back then was happy. I sometimes wish I could go back there. Like now I see that glacier of butter and milk and cream. I can see the brook bubbling over the rocks and the willows above it. I can hear the turkeys cackling in the yard, and the chickens running and swimming in the dust. I see the creek next to our house and the cows coming to drink and cool their feet in the shallow water. I was born into slavery, but I was never a slave. I worked for good people. Is that called slavery, white gentlemen?”

It wouldn’t be another decade until 1964-1968 when African Americans would officially have rights and freedoms on an equal footing with white people.

Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %

The post The Struggle for Rights. appeared first on AA-Historics Itesva.

]]>
Deliverance from Slavery https://www.aahistoricsitesva.org/deliverance-from-slavery/ Sun, 10 Oct 2021 12:46:39 +0000 https://themepalacedemo.com/fairtimes/?p=134 Virginia was the first English colony to which slaves were brought in the early seventeenth century. However, the "beginning of the end" of slavery was also in Virginia.

The post Deliverance from Slavery appeared first on AA-Historics Itesva.

]]>
0 0
Read Time:1 Minute, 19 Second

Virginia was the first English colony to which slaves were brought in the early seventeenth century. However, the “beginning of the end” of slavery was also in Virginia. In May 1861, a month after the outbreak of the Civil War, in which 11 states of the slaveholding South opposed the industrial North, three Virginia slaves belonging to the Confederate Army escaped to Fort Monroe, a military fortress at Hampton Harbor that was under the control of the federal government.

The slaves asked the Federation Army for asylum. General Benjamin Franklin Butler, commander in chief, declared the fugitive slaves “war booty” of Federation forces, an inhumane term at first glance, and allowed the fugitives to be retained and assisted.

Thus thousands of African Americans who had fled from the South to Fort Monroe during the war gained their freedom. It was this event that set the stage for the subsequent abolition of slavery.

In early 1863, President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, an edict abolishing slavery nationwide. All “persons held as slaves” in the Confederate states were declared free men. The final abolition of slavery occurred with the passage of the 13th and 14th Amendments to the Constitution. The 14th Amendment, passed in 1866, granted all former slaves U.S. citizenship.

In September 2011, Fort Hampton ceased to exist as a defense facility as the Pentagon removed the fort from its balance sheet to save money. Two months later, President Barack Obama – son of a Kenyan native and an American woman of European descent – listed Fort Monroe as a National Historic Landmark.

Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %

The post Deliverance from Slavery appeared first on AA-Historics Itesva.

]]>