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Civil Rights in New Jersey before the 1950s

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Civil Rights in New Jersey before the 1950s Voting rights revoked in 1807; 1844 constitution expressly restricted the franchise to white males. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Civil Rights in New Jersey before the 1950s


1
Civil Rights in New Jersey before the 1950s
  • Voting rights revoked in 1807 1844 constitution
    expressly restricted the franchise to white
    males.
  • Many whites in New Jersey actively supported the
    colonization movement during the 1850s.
  • During the Civil War era whites in New Jersey
    were often hostile to the aspirations of African
    Americans.
  • Many people wanted the Constitution as it is,
    the Nation as it was.

2
Reconstruction Amendments
  • New Jersey did not ratify the 13th Amendment
    until after it became federal law.
  • In 1867, the state rescinded ratification of the
    14th amendment.
  • The 15th amendment was not ratified until 1871
  • But Thomas Mundy, of Perth Amboy, was the first
    person to vote under the protection of the 15th
    amendment.

Thomas Mundy
3
1870s and 1880s saw significant legal gains
  • In 1872, Newark desegregated its public schools.
  • 1881 New Jersey School Law made it illegal to
    deny a child a public education because of race.
  • 1884 case of Pierce v. Union District Trustees
    (Burlington City) ostensibly outlawed segregation
    in public schools throughout the state.
  • 1884 Civil Rights Law outlawed discrimination in
    public transportation, lodging, and
    entertainment.

4
End of European immigration results in huge
influx of African Americans in the 1920s
5
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6
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7
The Georgia of the North
  • African Americans faced endemic prejudice, which
    resulted in the formation of urban ghettos.
  • Prior to the New Deal, black workers were, by and
    large, excluded from higher paying jobs and labor
    unions.
  • In the face of discrimination, many black leaders
    in New Jersey preached racial solidarity.
  • Bordentown School (1886-1955) was New Jerseys
    Tuskegee of the North.

Lewis Hine photograph of hairdressers at the
Bordentown School, 1935 (www.geh.org)
8
Incremental gains during the 1930s and 1940s
  • African American newspapers, such as the New
    Jersey Herald News vigorously protested
    discriminatory practices.
  • Segregation in public schools became worse in
    many parts of the state because white
    administrators and parents did not want white
    children mixing with poorly prepared and
    unhealthy migrants from the Souththere were 75
    separate black schools in 1935.
  • The New Deal and World War II employment improved
    the economic status of African Americans.
  • African Americans became more politically
    assertive and organized many economic boycotts
    buy where you can work campaigns.
  • In 1937, Guy Moorehead, from Newark, became the
    1st Democratic Assemblyman in state history.
  • In 1938, the state formed the Urban Colored
    Population Commission to improve employment,
    education, and housing conditions for blacks.
  • FDRs Executive Order 8802 opened up defense jobs
    to African Americans.

9
The foundation of modern civil rights
  • In 1945, New Jersey outlawed discrimination in
    employment and created a Division Against
    Discrimination within the Department of
    Education.
  • The 1947 state constitution forbid segregation in
    the militia and public schools New Jerseys law
    was a catalyst for President Trumans action in
    regard to the Armed Services.
  • The 1949 Freeman Act empowered the state to
    investigate individual complaints of
    discrimination in 1954, discrimination in public
    housing was prohibited.
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