Yes. Black Americans have served in the US Armed Forces well before the 1920s, although, at that time, the military was still segregated.
Black theatre, in the United States, dramatic movement encompassing plays written by, for, and about African Americans. ... Black theatre flourished during the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s and '30s.
African Americans moved to the North in the 1920s as part of the Great Migration, seeking better economic opportunities and fleeing the systemic racism and violence of the Jim Crow South. The demand for industrial labor during World War I and the economic boom of the 1920s also attracted African Americans to urban centers in the North. Additionally, the Harlem Renaissance and other cultural movements in northern cities provided a sense of community and empowerment for African Americans seeking to escape the oppressive conditions of the segregated South.
it made turtles fly
one is the large number of Americans who moved to the suburbs since there was an industrial boom and farmers weren't doing so swell.
The Harlem Renaissance is the term applied to the movement of African Americans from the Southern to the Northern cities during the 1920s and 1930s. the time period coincided with black migration to the northern cities to look for employment opportunities that became available after World War I.
How was life in the 1920s for African Americans?
African Americans and farmers
1920s
Harlem Renaissance
It was the 1920s not the 1910s and it was the Ku Klux Klan who were and still are hostile to Jews, Catholics and African-Americans.
It did not allow African Americans to join.
It did not allow African Americans to join.
It did not allow African Americans to join.
It did not allow African Americans to join.
the ones who did not prosper in the 1920s was African Americans and farmers
The Harlem neighborhood in Manhattan was home to the Harlem Renaissance in the 1920s through the early 1930s.
the south, where the Jim crow laws were in effect