ss8h7 Summary New South 1
ss8h7 Summary New South 1
ss8h7 Summary New South 1
SS8H7a
Evaluate the impact the Bourbon Triumvirate, Henry Grady, International Cotton
Exposition, Tom Watson and the Populists, Rebecca Latimer Felton, the 1906 Atlanta Riot, the
Leo Frank Case, and the county unit system had on Georgia during this period.
HENRY GRADY
Spokesman for the New South movement. Henry
Grady used persuasive articles in the Atlanta
Constitution newspaper to convince citizens that
Georgia needed to become more industrialized
and modern. As an orator (public speaker) he
traveled to New York and gave speeches to
wealthy northern businessmen. Grady
persuaded northerners to invest money in
southern businesses who wanted to become
more industrialized. This changed and improved
the Georgia economy that relied mostly on
agriculture to one that started to have more
manufacturing. As a result, the city of Atlanta
became one of the largest cities in the South.
SS8H7abcd SUMMARY - The New South Racism Civil Rights Activists of the Early 20th Century
SS8H7b Analyze how rights were denied to African-Americans through Jim Crow laws,
Plessy v. Ferguson, disenfranchisement, and racial violence.
JIM CROW LAWS
After Reconstruction in 1877, conservative white
Democrats regained control of government
through the KKK and black codes that restricted
freedmens rights. In order to preserve white
supremacy, state and local governments began
to create Jim Crow laws that segregated
(or separated) blacks from whites in most public
settings. Schools, military, housing,
transportation, restaurants, restrooms, water
fountains, and even cemeteries among other
public settings were segregated. Blacks
received inferior facilities and were punished for
entering places designated for whites only.
DISENFRANCHISEMENT
The 15th amendment of the US
Constitution provided voting rights
for African Americans. Angry
southern racist whites did not
want to let go of their power in
state and local government. In order to
preserve white supremacy, Georgia politicians
began passing laws to restrict or deny
(disenfranchise) the right of blacks to vote in
elections. Literacy tests and poll taxes were
targeted to keep blacks from voting that had
been denied the right to an education and
denied money for their work because of slavery
However, this kept poor & uneducated whites
from voting too. The Grandfather clause gave
back the right to vote to poor whites if they
were related to someone who could vote
before 1867, however, since blacks could not
vote prior to 1867 this excluded them from
being able to vote. Other unfair ways to
disenfranchise blacks were white primaries,
gerrymandering, and racial violence by KKK.
SS8H7c
PLESSY v. FERGUSON
Supreme Court case in 1896 that made it
constitutionally legal for racial
segregation, as long as facilities were
separate but equal. Homer Plessy, a
man with only 1/8th black ancestry and 7/8
white ancestry was arrested for riding in a
whites only railroad car. He tried to sue
claiming that his 14th amendment rights
had been violated, however, 7 Supreme
Court justices ruled that is was not
against the law to keep the races
segregated. This ruling allowed racism to
go unpunished in the South.
SS8H7d Explain reasons for World War I and describe Georgias contributions.
RACIAL VIOLENCE
Riots, lynchings, mob attacks, threats
and intimidation were ways whites were
able to enforce black codes and Jim
Crow laws. The legal system did very
little to protect the rights of blacks in the
South. Hate groups like the KKK used
violence to keep blacks from voting or
exercising other rights that were
supposed to be protected in the US
Constitution. Racial violence also
played a role in the Great Migration of
blacks moving to northern cities.
GEORGIA WWI
CONTRIBUTIONS
Georgia helped win WWI
by providing over 100,000
soldiers and many women
volunteers. Military camps
around the state trained
soldiers, pilots, and doctors
and later became Forts
that are still used today for
training. There was also a
prison camp that housed
captured German soldiers.
Cotton grown in Georgia
made uniforms and food
was sent overseas to the
troops. Citizens bought
Liberty Bonds and grew
Victory Gardens to help.