Humans.
The volunteers were formed into segregated units with white officers.
The answer here is clearly no. Black Americans were in the Northern States and or 13 British Colonies in both conflicts.
They were not treated equally. For example there was a white school and a black school.one, they werent slaves then and two, they were separated from the whites.
African Americans
No, Native Americans are not considered white. They are recognized as a distinct racial and cultural group with their own identities, histories, and rights. In the context of racial classifications in the United States, Native Americans are categorized separately from white individuals. This distinction is important for understanding issues related to sovereignty, heritage, and historical treatment.
The volunteers were formed into segregated units with white officers.
In the 1860's African Americans were still considered to be slaves and any discrimination was overlooked. They had no legal means to fight the discrimination and it won't be until 1964 with the passage of the civil rights act that discrimination became illegal.
The answer here is clearly no. Black Americans were in the Northern States and or 13 British Colonies in both conflicts.
D. Ray White was a civil rights activist in Mississippi who was murdered in 1966. His killing was believed to be racially motivated due to his activism in fighting for the rights of African Americans during the Civil Rights Movement. His murder remains unsolved.
Hispanic means that South Americans are of Spanish descent and Spaniards are Europeans which means there are considered White
They were not treated equally. For example there was a white school and a black school.one, they werent slaves then and two, they were separated from the whites.
There is no precise measurement of how many African-Americans have some white ancestry, but it is thought that almost all African-Americans whose ancestors were slaves in the pre-Civil War United States have some white ancestry.
African Americans
All of the above
There were many examples of disenfranchisement and restrictions placed on African-Americans after the Reconstruction. These included poll taxes, educational requirements, grandfather clauses, the Eight Box Law in South Carolina, property requirements, Jim Crow laws, and White Primaries.
African-Americans began to have a voice in the white-dominated press during the Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s, when journalists like Ida B. Wells and Civil Rights activists brought attention to racial injustices through various media outlets. This led to the integration of African-American perspectives and voices in mainstream media.
Because at the time, Native Americans and women were considered to be lesser than the white man. In society back then, in ascending order: Native Americans, white women, white men (not including all other races which were considered lesser than the white man)