Pictures from the
Jim
Crow Museum
(Click
Here to go to museum)
Thomas Dartmouth "Daddy" Rice, a White man, was one of the first
performers to wear blackface makeup. His skin was darkened with burnt
cork. His Jim
Crow song-and-dance routine was an astounding success in 1832.

"Jim Crow" was a stock character in minstrel shows, along with counterparts
Jim Dandy and Zip Coon. Rice's subsequent blackface
characters were Sambos, Coons, and Dandies.
White audiences were receptive to the portrayals of Blacks as singing,
dancing, grinning fools--much like OJ Simpson, Michael Jackson and Montel
Williams. They will do anything to please the White man and be
accepted within his good graces and are the official "lapdogs" of the 21st
Century.
The mammy caricature implied that Black women were only fit to be domestic
workers; thus, the stereotype became a rationalization for economic
discrimination.
During the Jim Crow period, approximately 1877 to 1966, America's
race-based,
race-segregated job economy limited most blacks to menial, low paying, low
status
jobs.
Racist items are sold openly; they are sold nationally. Even the language
used in the advertisements is reminiscent of 1950s sales. For example, some
eBay dealers use the word nigger in their auction titles and descriptions,
even when the word is not a part of the item's name. One item for sale was
described by the
dealer as a "black nigger boy eating watermelon
figure." The dealer used nigger in the title to
attract more potential buyers.
A 1916 magazine advertisement, copyrighted by Morris & Bendien, showed a
black child drinking ink. The caption read, "Nigger Milk."
EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION
THE THIRTEENTH AMENDMENT
With the
ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution in
December 1865, slavery was officially abolished in all areas of the United
States. Andrew Johnson of Tennessee clearly had no interest in ensuring the
freedom of southern Blacks. The new state legislatures passed laws designed
to keep Blacks in poverty and in positions of servitude. Under these
so-called Black codes, ex-slaves who had no steady employment could be
arrested and ordered to pay stiff fines. Prisoners who could not pay the sum
were hired out as virtual slaves. In some areas, Black children could be
forced to serve as apprentices in local industries. Blacks were also
prevented from buying land and were denied fair wages for their work.
A group of Senators
took control of the 1920 Republican Convention and turned to Harding. He won
the Presidential election by an unprecedented landslide of 60 percent of the
popular vote. By 1923 the postwar depression seemed to be giving way to a
new surge of prosperity, and newspapers hailed Harding as a wise statesman
carrying out his campaign promise which was "Less government in business and more
business in government."
Behind the facade,
not all of Harding's Administration was so impressive. Word began to reach
the President that some of his friends were using their official positions
for their own enrichment. Alarmed he complained....."My friends.....they're
the ones that keep me walking the floors nights!"
He supported the
conservative policies of the Republican leadership. He favored a high
protective
tariff (import tax). Although he voted for U.S. entry into World War I,
in April 1917, he opposed high taxes on war profits because he opposed all
measures that might harm business interests. For political reasons he
supported the Anti-Saloon League's pressure on the Congress of the United
States to submit the 18th Amendment (Prohibition) to the states
and the Volstead Act, which prohibited the sale of almost all beverages with
an alcoholic content of more than 0.5 percent.
After the war he joined other Republicans in opposing the
Versailles Treaty, which included United States membership in
the League of Nations, an association of the world's nations meant to be
the first international peacekeeping body. Critics of the treaty argued
that it might require the United States to send troops into another
European war against the will of Congress or the president.
