Very hard. It had only been 67 years since they were given citizenship after the Civil War. Many were former slaves and had lived through the Civil War. Discrimination was still very much around. Black children couldn't go to the same schools as white, couldn't go to the public swimming pool, or to play in playgrounds. Adults couldn't eat in the same places as white nor still not vote in elections ( there were laws passed to prevent them from voting). Most Black residents of a city/town were forced to live in a separate section of the city/town ( along with other ethnic groups). Jobs were also hard to come by beyond a certain level and getting into a college was impossible for a black young man ( a woman wouldn't have a chance to enroll). There were no heads of major businesses that were black and a few business owners.
it was yedam kim
a shortage of chairs
Panama Canal
They came because they wanted their rights and freedom that they didn't get from their homelands that they have came from.
it not
modernism
Oil was called black gold in the early 1900'2
it was yedam kim
a shortage of chairs
black and white
the black plague in the early 1900s
It depends how early: 1700s: agriculture 1800s: Railroads 1900s: cars.
No
In the early 1900s about 7-14 days
america
There were black and white movies in the early part of the 1900s. By the 1960s, almost everything was in color. Wizard of Oz was quite startling to open in black and white and switch to color.
to 2004 in haiti was the last one.