How was life in the 1920s for African Americans?
the south, where the Jim crow laws were in effect
The two primary groups involved in the racial tensions of the 1920s were African Americans and white Americans, particularly members of the Ku Klux Klan. The 1920s saw a resurgence of the Klan, which targeted African Americans, immigrants, and other minority groups, promoting white supremacy and racial violence. This period was marked by significant events such as race riots, lynchings, and the Great Migration of Black Americans to northern cities, which heightened conflicts over jobs, housing, and social status. These tensions reflected broader societal struggles over race and identity in the United States during that era.
Many Americans became fascinated with heroes in the 1920s, because they longed for symbols of old-fashioned virtues.
normalcy
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