education, jim crow, and women in the progressive era ch 9, sec 1, 3, 4

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Education, Jim Crow, and Women in the Progressive Era Ch 9, Sec 1, 3, 4

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Page 1: Education, Jim Crow, and Women in the Progressive Era Ch 9, Sec 1, 3, 4

Education, Jim Crow, and Women in the Progressive Era

Ch 9, Sec 1, 3, 4

Page 2: Education, Jim Crow, and Women in the Progressive Era Ch 9, Sec 1, 3, 4

Education

• By 1865, 50% of white children attended school.– 2% graduated from high school.

• Push for more school funding, longer school year, child labor laws.– By 1910, 72% of children attended school.• 8.6% graduated high school.

• Compulsory education.

Page 3: Education, Jim Crow, and Women in the Progressive Era Ch 9, Sec 1, 3, 4

1865 School

Page 4: Education, Jim Crow, and Women in the Progressive Era Ch 9, Sec 1, 3, 4

1910School

Page 5: Education, Jim Crow, and Women in the Progressive Era Ch 9, Sec 1, 3, 4

• Immigrants highly valued education.– Children and adults attended.

• Schools aided in assimilation.– Taught English, American history, culture, values.

• Religious schools existed.• Schools segregated by color.• Colleges, universities opened in huge numbers

in late 1800s, early 1900s.– Only wealthy families could afford, at first.

Page 6: Education, Jim Crow, and Women in the Progressive Era Ch 9, Sec 1, 3, 4

• Women’s colleges began to open, men’s colleges began to accept women.

• Few colleges would accept black students.• During Reconstruction, many black universities

were founded.• Booker T. Washington founded Tuskegee

Institute in Alabama.– Taught students skills and trades to push for

economic equality.• W.E.B. DuBois wanted black students do study

liberal arts and become political leaders.– Take pride in both African and American heritages.

Page 7: Education, Jim Crow, and Women in the Progressive Era Ch 9, Sec 1, 3, 4
Page 8: Education, Jim Crow, and Women in the Progressive Era Ch 9, Sec 1, 3, 4

Booker T. Washington

Tuskegee Institute

Page 9: Education, Jim Crow, and Women in the Progressive Era Ch 9, Sec 1, 3, 4
Page 10: Education, Jim Crow, and Women in the Progressive Era Ch 9, Sec 1, 3, 4

W.E.B. DuBois

Page 11: Education, Jim Crow, and Women in the Progressive Era Ch 9, Sec 1, 3, 4

Discrimination and Jim Crow• After Civil War, slavery ended, discrimination

began.• Voting restrictions:– Property Test-had to own property to vote.– Poll Tax-had to pay a tax to vote.– Literacy Test-be able to read, write, meet

minimum standards of knowledge.– Grandfather Clause-if your grandfather could

vote, you could vote.• Did not single out black voters

(unconstitutional), but really did.

Page 12: Education, Jim Crow, and Women in the Progressive Era Ch 9, Sec 1, 3, 4

“What is that big word?”

Page 13: Education, Jim Crow, and Women in the Progressive Era Ch 9, Sec 1, 3, 4

• Segregation also existed, especially in south.– Separating a group of people from the whole.– Known in the south as Jim Crow Laws.

• Black and white segregated in schools, hospitals, public buildings, restaurants, public transportation, water fountains, restrooms.

• Supreme Court case Plessy v. Ferguson established “separate but equal” doctrine.– Segregation was legal, as long as facilities were

equal.– Rarely equal in practice.

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• Segregation sometimes turned violent.– Suspected criminals, blacks who got “uppity” were

sometimes subjected to lynching.• Hanging.

• Many southern black families moved north.– Faced “de facto” discrimination.• By custom, not law.

• Many, black & white, opposed discrimination.• 1909, Mary Ovington founded NAACP-

National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.– Goal-abolish segregation, discrimination, gain civil

rights for black citizens.

Page 20: Education, Jim Crow, and Women in the Progressive Era Ch 9, Sec 1, 3, 4
Page 21: Education, Jim Crow, and Women in the Progressive Era Ch 9, Sec 1, 3, 4
Page 22: Education, Jim Crow, and Women in the Progressive Era Ch 9, Sec 1, 3, 4

Mary Ovington

Page 23: Education, Jim Crow, and Women in the Progressive Era Ch 9, Sec 1, 3, 4

Women• Wanted suffrage, to control their own

property & income, have access to higher education & professional jobs.

• For the most part, women were still homemakers.– Worked outside home as maids, nurses, teachers.

• Many did volunteer work.– Joined clubs that promoted suffrage, temperance,

women’s rights.

Page 24: Education, Jim Crow, and Women in the Progressive Era Ch 9, Sec 1, 3, 4

• As more women went to school and entered workforce, they began to demand more.

• “New Women” changed fashion, hairstyles to be more convenient, wanted more out of marriage, access to birth control info.

• Suffrage movement grew.• Women also had increased purchasing power.– Creation of department stores, mail-order

catalogs.

Page 25: Education, Jim Crow, and Women in the Progressive Era Ch 9, Sec 1, 3, 4
Page 26: Education, Jim Crow, and Women in the Progressive Era Ch 9, Sec 1, 3, 4

A.J. Stewart Co., First Department Store

Page 27: Education, Jim Crow, and Women in the Progressive Era Ch 9, Sec 1, 3, 4
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