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Target • African Americas, Native Americans, and women had almost no rights during many time periods. What are some of the reasons why the government might have prevented these groups from buying land, voting, starting a business, or signing a contract?

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Target. African Americas, Native Americans, and women had almost no rights during many time periods. What are some of the reasons why the government might have prevented these groups from buying land, voting, starting a business, or signing a contract?. Georgia’s Redemption Years. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Target

• African Americas, Native Americans, and women had almost no rights during many time periods. What are some of the reasons why the government might have prevented these groups from buying land, voting, starting a business, or signing a contract?

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Georgia’s Redemption Years

According to the World Book, redemption can mean buying back, paying off a debt, or a state of being

rescued, or delivered from some great evil…

How does Redemption fit Georgia after the Reconstruction Period?

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What played an important part in the rebirth of Atlanta after the Civil War?

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A City Rises from the Ashes

•Atlanta was burned by Northern Troops

•By 1861, Atlanta was 4th largest city

•During the 1860’s center for communication and supplies

•By 2000 there is more than 4 million population in Atlanta

•Atlanta is state capital in 1868

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The Bourbon Triumvirate

• Three Democrats that tried to help Georgia rebuild after Reconstruction

• Wanted stronger economic ties with the industrial North

• Wanted to protect White Supremacy• Active in Georgia Politics from 1862-1890• Influenced Georgia Politics well into the 20th century• Bourbon – a line of kings from France who ruled for

over 200 years• Triumvirate – a ruling body of three

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Joseph E. Brown• The oldest member of the triumvirate• Born in South Carolina, grew up in Union County• Graduated from Yale Law School• State Senator, Blue Ridge Judicial Circuit Judge• Georgia Governor in 1857 (served 3 terms)• Asked Georgians to go along with Radical

Reconstructionists• Chief Justice of Georgia Supreme Court• Worked for company that leased Western and Atlantic

Railroad• US Senator until 1891, when Gordon resigned(1880)• Trustee for University of Georgia• President of Atlanta Board of Education

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Alfred H. Colquitt• Born in Walton County, son of US Senator (Colquitt

County is named for his father)• Princeton University• Fought in the Mexican War• State Senator with Brown in 1849, became a close

friend with Brown• Major General in Civil War• Elected Governor in 1876• He was tried for corruption, but found innocent• Reduced state debt and a new state constitution was

approved 1877, the next one would be 1945• Served in the US Senate1883 and 1888, died 1894

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John B. Gordon• Son of a minister, born in Upson County• Attended the University of Georgia• Worked as a newspaper correspondent• Manager of a coal mine in Dade County at beginning

of Civil War• Lt. General in Civil War, wrote a book about it• In 1872, he became a US Senator• In 1880, he resigned the senate and worked with

railroads• In 1886, he became Georgia Governor• Reduced debt and brought industry into the state• Returned to US Senate in 1891-1897• Gordon College in Barnesville, is named after him.

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5W’s and H

• Create a chart using the following words, who, what, when, where, why, and how to describe the following terms: Bourbon Triumvirate, Joseph Brown, Alfred Colquitt, and John B. Gordon

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Quick check of Understanding

Bourbon Triumvirate

Joseph Brown

Alfred Colquitt

John B. Brown

Who

What

When

Where

Why

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Joseph E. Brown

Alfred H. Colquitt

John B. Gordon

Which man has a statue at the state capital? The only statue there of a man on horseback…

What happened to cause the decline of the Bourbon Triumvirate?

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The Decline of the B. T.

• Not all Georgians were satisfied with the accomplishments of the Bourbon Triumvirate and other Democrats who sought to reconstruct the economy of the south

• They did not help the poor, or education, no reforms for factory working conditions, or improvements in mental hospitals

• Not only did they not improve the lives of convicts (prisoners) in the state, most profited personally from their labors.

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The Feltons Challenge the Bourbons

•New Group Independent Democrats

•Started in Cartersville, GA

•Leaders were William and Rebecca Latimer Felton – William was a doctor, Methodist preacher, farmer, and public speaker.

•Their family owned The Carterville Courant, a newspaper.

•Rebecca was a leader in Women’s Suffrage and Temperance Movements

•In 1889, Hoke Smith asked her to be a columnist for the Atlanta Journal.

•She remained with the Journal for 41 years.

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The Convict Lease System

• During the Civil War prisons were destroyed

• After the War, lack of jobs led to crime

• What was the state to do with increase of prison population? (90% were black)

• One solution was the Convict Lease System– Began in 1866– Prisoners were leased to people who provide them

with food, clothing, and housing in exchange for labor

– Began with the use of prisoners to do public work

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By 1879…• Injustices began to show in the Convict Lease

Program• Most of the prisoners went to three main

companies, 2 owned by Brown and Gordon• Companies agreed to pay the state $25,000 in

return for the use of however many prisoners they could get

• They were to give the prisoners housing, clothing, medicine, rest on Sundays

• The companies ignored the rights of the prisoners and in some cases worked them to death

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In the 1880’s…

• Legislative committees met to study the problem of prisoners

• Not only were prisoners hurt, but paid laborers who were already poor, were not able to find work because the prisoners took all the jobs.

• The Feltons worked tirelessly to change the laws

• The Convict Lease System was changed in 1897

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The Populists Movement

Dr. and Mrs. Felton pushed for:

–Improvements in Education

–Improvements in Prison reform

–Limits on alcohol traffic

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Henry W. Grady

•In 1874, Grady wrote for the Atlanta Daily Herald

•He described the need for a “New South”

Henry W. Grady•Born in Athens in 1850.•Graduated from UGA•In 1880, he became the managing editor of the Atlanta Constitution.

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Henry W. Grady, the South’s Best Salesman

• Grady visited northern cities and spoke frequently about the “New South”

• Spoke of the growing southern economy, replacing agriculture with industry, textile mills, coal and iron mining, and tobacco factories

• He wanted the African Americans to become partners in developing the “NEW SOUTH”

Grady died of Pneumonia at the age of 39. He accomplished much in his short life.

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Education in the New South Era Outline

The Three-Month School Year, met two important needs:

a. Enabled students to get a public school education

b. Enabled them to hold jobs in factories/mills

c. Different times and places in each community

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Teacher Training late 1800’sa.People who wanted to teach

took a test (70, passing)b.Most had never been to

collegec.In 1882, 252 teachers went

to school in Georgia

Education in the New South Era

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Education Takes a Giant Step Backward

a. In 1877, limited to elementary education b. Segregated schools, until 1960’s

c. African Americans were left to be schooled in substandard schools with second hand supplies

Education in the New South Era

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Tom Watson• Georgia’s best known

Populist• Concerned about Georgia’s

poor and struggling farmers• Served in US Congress in

1890, Democrat• 1891, switched to Populist

Party• Introduced the RFD bill,

which gave farmers free mail service

• He began two magazines in Georgia to influence politics

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1906 Race Riot• Blamed on several sources• Saturday, September 22,

local newspapers carried false reports of black assaulting whites

• By 9 pm, over 5,000 whites and blacks gathered on Decatur Street

• Rumors of whites with guns caused fear to grow

• Reality struck, the riots lasted for two days, Martial Law was declared to stop the violence 21 people were killed, 18 black, hundreds were injured

A French Newspaper reported on the Race Riots in Atlanta

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The Trial of Leo Frank• Frank, born in NY, was

superintendent of the National Pencil Company factory in Atlanta

• Charged with the murder of Mary Phagan, a 14 yr. old employee

• He was tried and convicted and sentenced to death.

• Proof was just from one witness who was also a suspect.

• Frank was Jewish, and many people did not like his religious beliefs.

• His lawyers appealed to the state supreme court.

• The governor, Slaton, changed his sentence from death to life in prison

•The change in his sentence angered KKK members

•25 armed Klan members went to his prison sale, took him and hanged him

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The Klan is Reborn

In July, 1915, due to the anti-Jewish feelings following the Leo Frank case, the KKK received a charter from the Fulton County Superior Court.

On Thanksgiving night 1915, Atlanta preacher and salesman William Simmons and 34 others climbed to the top of Stone Mountain and lit torches as they circled a burning cross. They called their group the Knights of Mary Phagan.

Thus they were reborn in Georgia, and in other states.

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County Unit System1917 – Neill Primary Act

• What is it?

• What did those who oppose it think?

• What did those who supported it think?

• How long was it in effect in Georgia?

• Why did it end?

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County Unit System1917 – Neill Primary Act

• What is it?– A method of counting votes for each county as a

unit– The 8 most populated counties had 6 county unit

votes each (total 48 votes)– The next 30 had 4 votes each (120 votes)– The remaining 121 counties had 2 votes each (242

votes)– The most populated areas were not represented

equally…

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County Unit System1917 – Neill Primary Act

• What did those who oppose it think?–Men who were elected to office without

a majority of the state’s popular vote did not represent the people of Georgia

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County Unit System1917 – Neill Primary Act

• What did those who supported it think?– This system allows small, less-populated counties

to have the same power and influence as large counties

• How long was it in effect in Georgia?– Until 1962

• Why did it end?– It was declared UNCONSTITUTIONAL

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Denial of Civil Rights

• Jim Crow Laws - established separate facilities for blacks and whites– Restrooms, water fountains, dining areas, railroad

cars, waiting rooms, hotels

• Plessy V. Ferguson – made segregation the law of the land until 1954– Gave states the right to control social discrimination

and to promote segregation of the races

• Cummings V. Richmond County Bd. Of Education – again the Supreme Court sided with Georgia against Black parents in Augusta

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Denial of Civil Rights

• Grandfather Clause: a clause inserted in the Georgia Constitution in 1908 that stated only those men whose fathers or grandfathers had been eligible to vote in 1867 were eligible to vote – it disenfranchised most of Georgia’s African Americans

• Poll Tax: a tax to be able to vote, they also had to own property and be able to pass a literacy test. These tests were not standard and could be made up on the spot.

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Booker T. Washington

•Economic independence is the only road to social and political equality•He gave his most famous speech at the Cotton States and International Exposition•His speech was delivered to a racially mixed crowd •His speech shaped race relations and strongly influenced black leadership for the next 20 years

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A ship lost at sea for many days suddenly sighted a friendly vessel. From the mast of the unfortunate vessel was seen a signal, “Water, water; we die of thirst!”The answer from the friendly vessel at once came back, “Cast down your bucket where you are.” A second time the signal “Water, water; send us water!” ran up from the distressed vessel, and was answered, “Cast down your bucket where you are!” A third and fourth signal for water was answered, “Cast down your bucket where you are.” DISCUSSION:What does this mean?Which Civil Right Leader of the 1950-60’s also used this same idea in his speeches?Do you think Washington was trying to help the blacks or the whites? Why?

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Cotton States and International Exposition, 1895

This exposition was a way to showcase the economic recovery of the south and to show natural resources to attract Northern businesses to the south.

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W. E. B. Dubois, Professor of Economics, Atlanta University

•Did not agree with Washington•Truth and knowledge would help integrate the races•“Talented 10th” – would be educated and would lead and teach the other 90% of the African American population•He called Washington and his followers the “Tuskegee Machine”

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John and Lugenia Hope• John Hope had more in common with Dubois, he was close friends with Dubois and they were both educators in the Atlanta University system•Hope was the President of Atlanta University•Hope brought all the African American Colleges together and formed the Atlanta University Center.

•Mrs. Hope organized the Neighborhood Union which offered vocational training, health center, and boys and girls clubs.•Also gave financial aid

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Alonzo Herndon•Born a slave on a Walton County Plantation•Learned to be a Barber•Opened a shop in Atlanta•Started to expand businesses as a white barber•Began buying property and ended up owning most of Auburn Avenue•In 1905, he bought a small insurance company and hired African American students to run the company.•It became the largest African American Owned company in the Nation at the time. Today it is still a leader worth over $200 million and does business in 17 states

Herndon died in 1927: “Some of us sit and wait for opportunity when it is always with us.”

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Rich’sRich’s

• Famous Atlanta Department Store (now known as Macy’s)

• Started in 1867, by Morris Rich

• Known as a store “with heart” – took farmers’ produce in payment– took teachers’ scrip as money during the Great

Depression

• Grew to be a regional shopping chain

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Coca-ColaCoca-Cola• Invented in Atlanta in 1885, by

John S. Pemberton as tonic

• Business purchased and expanded by Asa Candler

• Sold company in 1919, for $25 million

• Robert Woodruff grew company to billions of dollars in sales each year

• Woodruff and Candler generous givers to worthy causes

Asa Chandler

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In 1812, this political cartoon appeared in the Boston Weekly Messenger depicting the odd shape of a voting district created by Massachusetts governor Elbridge Gerry to gain political advantage for his party. The cartoonist called it a “Gerry-mander.”