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The Struggle for Justice at Home

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The Struggle for Justice at Home Chapter 25 Section 4 Angela Brown * – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Struggle for Justice at Home


1
The Struggle for Justice at Home
  • Chapter 25 Section 4
  • Angela Brown

2
Discrimination Continues
  • Jim Crow Laws Continue
  • De facto segregation in the North was still in
    force.
  • De Juro segregation continues in the south.

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4
Economic Discrimination
  • 1 out of 5 African Americans were jobless in
    1941.
  • Government agencies honored employers requests of
    whites only.
  • 2 million migrated North in the 1940s.

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es/WHII/slaves /TheJimCrowLaws-Front.jpg
5
Substandard Housing
  • 1941 survey showed 50 African Americans vs. only
    14 white houses to be substandard.

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6
Riots in Detroit
  • June 1943 riots in Detriots
  • 34 killed
  • Millions of worth of damage
  • Spurred by fear and resentment.

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7
Soldiers and Segregation
  • Troops were segregated.
  • Kansas restaurant served German prisoners of war
    but would not serve African American GIs in
    uniform.

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8
Double V Campaign
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  • 1942 poll should 6 out of 10 white Americans felt
    African Americans were satisfied with their
    existing conditions.
  • The Government mirrored this attitude.
  • Pittsburgh Courier (African American Newspaper)
    launched campaign in 1942.
  • The first v for victory against the Axis powers
    the second for victory in equality at home.

9
Congress of Racial Equality (CORE)
  • 1942 Chicago - believed in using nonviolent
    techniques to end racism.
  • Organized its first sit-ins at Jack Spratt Coffee
    House refused to leave until everyone was
    served
  • Jack Spratts discriminatory policies ended.
  • The technique spread to other cities

10
Union
  • Unions did not accept African American members
  • Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters railway
    union (most railroad maids and porters were
    black).
  • 1932 won higher wages and cut working hours and
    travel requirements.

11
A. Phillip Randolph
  • Planned a massive march on Washington for July,
    1941 to protest factory discrimination.
  • FDR concerned about the effect on national unity
    signed Executive Order 8802.
  • Randolph called off the march.

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12
Executive Order 8802
  • Opened Jobs and job training programs to all
    Americans in defense plants.
  • Set up the Fair Employment Practices Committee
    (FEPC) to hear complaints about job
    discrimination in defense industries and the
    government.

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13
A. Philip Randolph
  • After the war, became Vice-President of the AFL
    and CIO in 1955.
  • Directed the 1963 March on Washington
  • Stood beside Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. as he
    gave his I have a Dream speech to 200,000
    people.

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14
Adam Clayton Powell, Jr
  • Charismatic minister from Harlem
  • 1944 became one of only two African Americans in
    Congress.
  • Powell Amendments called for the cut-off of
    federal funds to any organization that practiced
    racial discrimination.

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15
Mexican Americans
  • Faced discrimination but gained new job
    opportunities in the defense industries.
  • Bracero workers
  • 1942 agreement provided transportation, food,
    shelter, and medical care for workers.

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os-california-1.jpg
16
  • 1942 1947 200,000 Mexican Farm Workers came to
    work in Bracero Program.
  • Lived in Spanish-speaking neighborhoods called
    braceros.
  • 1940s Mexican Americans wore long draped jackets
    and baggy pants with tight cuffs - and a slicked
    back ducktail haircut.

17
Zoot Suit Riots
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  • Look offended people.
  • Sailors on leave hunted and beat them for
    un-American look.
  • June 1943 street fighting turned into riots.

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18
  • Papers blamed the Mexicans.
  • Police arrested the Mexicans.
  • Army and Navy restricted soldiers off-duty access
    to Los Angeles.

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19
Native Americans
  • Many joined the armed forces or moved to cities
    and joined the defense industry.
  • They had to adapt quickly to white culture. Most
    did not return to reservations after the war.
  • The Cultural transition brought a sense of having
    lost their roots.

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20
Japanese Americans
  • 127,000 Japanese lived in the U.S. in 1941. Most
    lived on the West Coast.
  • 2/3 were Nisei (people born in the U.S. of
    parents who had emigrated from Japan)
  • Prejudice was strong.

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ic.html
21
  • Hostility grew into hatred and hysteria.
  • Rumors of sabotage and the press left Americans
    feeling that Japanese spies were everywhere.

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22
Japanese Relocation
  • Feb. 19, 1942 FDR signed executive order 9066.
  • It authorized the Sec. of War to establish
    military zones on the west coast and remove any
    or all persons from such zones.

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ites/northeastpage/safarik/ internmentpage.html
23
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  • Foreign born Italians and Germans were forced to
    move away from the coast but those orders were
    soon changed.

24
The War Relocation Authority
  • Purpose to set up and move out everyone of
    Japanese Ancestry.
  • 110,000 citizens and non-citizens were placed in
    Internment camps.

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ites/northeastpage/ safarik/internmentpage.html
25
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  • Many Japanese lost businesses, farms, homes, and
    other property most lost everything.

26
Manzanar
  • Wooden barracks
  • One room per family
  • Barbed Wire
  • Armed guards

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27
  • Japanese Americans provided most of Californias
    produce.
  • Their internment (farmers and grocers) threw
    parts of Californias agriculture sector into
    chaos.
  • Lost their primary supply of fruits and
    vegetables.

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28
Legal Challenges
  • Four cases eventually reached the Supreme Court
    challenging the Internment policy.
  • The Supreme Court ruled wartime relocation was
    unconstitutional.
  • Korematsu v U.S. (1944) majority opinion said
    military urgency of the situation demanded all
    citizens of Japanese ancestry be segregated
    temporarily.
  • The dissenting opinion stated internment was an
    an obvious racial discrimination.

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29
  • In 1945 Internees were allowed to leave the camp.
  • Some returned home.
  • Most others had lost everything.
  • Americans came to believe internment was an
    injustice.

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30
  • In 1988 Congress awarded each surviving Japanese
    American Internee a tax-free payment of 20,000
    and officially apologized.

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31
Nisei Soldiers
  • 20,000 served in the armed forces.
  • 1200 volunteered from relocation centers.
  • The 442nd regimental combat team fought in France
    and Germany.
  • They won more medals for bravery than any other
    unit in U.S. History.

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