1 / 117

African American History Since the Civil War

African American History Since the Civil War. dr. Liz Bryant. Women Leaders…. African-American Female Leadership. There were lots of women who took active roles during this era Did not sit around waiting for men to take care of the situation. Turn-Of-The-Century Women. Many were educated

ferris
Download Presentation

African American History Since the Civil War

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. African American History Since the Civil War dr. Liz Bryant

  2. Women Leaders…

  3. African-American Female Leadership • There were lots of women who took active roles during this era • Did not sit around waiting for men to take care of the situation

  4. Turn-Of-The-Century Women • Many were educated • Worked as teachers, journalists

  5. Why Are the Accomplishments of Women Overlooked? • Sexism of the era • Black women faced the “double burden” of racism and sexism • Face many unique issues • HOWEVER, they continue to fight for their rights

  6. Ida B. Wells

  7. Ida B. Wells

  8. Ida B. Wells Background • Daughter of slaves • Parents emphasized education • Trained as a journalist • Worked as a teacher

  9. Ida B. Wells and the Civil Rights Movement • Got involved after being forcibly removed from a train after refusing to sit in the African American car • Sued

  10. Wells’ Activism • Worked as a journalist • Used pseudonym of “Iola” • Discussed conditions of blacks in America

  11. Wells’ Biggest Focus during the 1890s

  12. Campaign Against Lynching

  13. Lynching • Wells’ biggest campaign is against lynching • Gets involved after a friend of hers is murdered

  14. What happened to Southern Blacks Who Challenged the System?

  15. Lynching

  16. Lynching

  17. Lynching of African Americans was an all too common occurrence.

  18. Lynching • Common • Popular for people to go to with their families • Nothing was done to the lynchers (townspeople pretended not to know about anything)

  19. Lynching • Justification by whites was that black men were trying to rape white women • Problem with this: • Many relationships between black men and white women were consensual • Many of the people who were lynched were never accused of sex crimes • What happened if a black woman was raped?

  20. Wells and Lynching • Wells was so upset about the murder of her friend that she travelled through the South investigating lynchings • Published her findings • Whites were angry and Wells and threatened her safety

  21. National Association of Colored Women

  22. National Association of Colored Women

  23. Founders: Ida B Wells and Harriet Tubman

  24. Founders: Frances E.W. Harper and Josephine St. Pierre

  25. Founders: Margaret Murray Washington and Mary Church Terrell

  26. National Association of Colored Women • “Lifting as we climb”

  27. National Association of Colored Women • Focus: • Job training • Wage equity • Childcare

  28. National Association of Colored Women • Want: • End to lynching • End to segregated transportation • Improved prison conditions

  29. National Association of Colored Women • Support: • Women’s suffrage campaigns

  30. National Association of Colored Women • Influential organization • By 1917, have over 300,000 members

  31. Ida B. Wells • Continues to push for a federal anti-lynching law • Becomes one of the founders of the NAACP

  32. Mary Church Terrell

  33. Mary Church Terrell

  34. Mary Church Terrell • Daughter of former slaves • Attended Oberlin College • BA • MA • One of the first African-Americans to earn her BA

  35. Mary Church Terrell • Focus on women’s rights • Very disappointed the suffrage movement often excluded African-Americans

  36. Mary Church Terrell • Focus on education • First African-American woman ever appointed to a school board

  37. National Association of College Women

  38. Mary Church Terrell • Worked as a journalist • Euphemia Kirk

  39. Mary Church Terrell • Founder of the NAACP • She and Wells were the only two women initially invited to join this movement

  40. Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin

  41. Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin • Raised in Boston • Educated at private schools

  42. Women’s Era

  43. Women’s Era • Ruffin serves as editor from 1890-97

  44. Women’s Era • First newspaper published for and by African-American women • Wanted black women to push for increased rights • Highlighted the accomplishments of black women

  45. National Federation of Afro-American Women • "...we are women, American women, as intensely interested in all that pertains to us as such as all other American women; we are not alienating or withdrawing, we are only coming to the front, willing to join any others in the same work and welcoming any others to join us."

  46. National Federation of Afro-American Women • Later merged into the National Association of Colored Women

  47. New Era Club • Advocacy club for black women

  48. “Ruffin Incident” • 1900 • General Federation of Women’s Clubs • Refused to seat her because of the New Era’s Club all black membership • “…colored women should confine themselves to their clubs and the large field of work open to them there."

  49. Turn of the century black leaders…

  50. Booker T Washington

More Related