View allAll Photos Tagged Segregation
Unfair segregation? On the left is "ticketed passengers," which would make me think the other line is for passengers without tickets. But the "restricted access" line is for first-class passengers, business-class passengers, "premium" passengers, military personnel, and USO people. Not fair, and not appropriate. TSA shouldn't treat people differently based on how much they paid for their tickets. Denver International Airport. Denver, CO.
This was once Paradise Park along the Silver River in Ocala. This was a park for blacks only during the days of segregation. Blacks were not allowed at the spring head unless they worked there. There was a glass bottom boat that came down here and took the people of color on boat rides. This is what's left.
Segregation, determination, demonstration, integration
Aggravation, humiliation, obligation to my nation
Ball of confusion
Oh yeah, that's what the world is today
- The Temptations -
One of the markers at the exhibit describing the history of the ‘separate but equal’ beaches. More detail of some of the photos are adjacent.
(Part of a photo-essay series on personal history and race with keyword FlaAla0518)
This concrete wall actually stood across the road in a London suburb, it was paid for by residents, why? to separate their privately owned houses from the newly built council houses because they didn't want to mix with "the poor people"..
This was in the 1950's, not SO long ago really, can you imagine the reponse of the authorities were such a thing to occur today ?!
Gnomes, segregated by sex, wait to be bought at the Scandinavian Festival in Thousand Oaks, California. This is for Trevor Carpenter's 2008 Challenge to document our community with at least one photo per week.
“As you grow older, you'll see white men cheat black men every day of your life, but let me tell you something and don't you forget it - whenever a white man does that to a black man, no matter who he is, how rich he is, or how fine a family he comes from, he is trash.” (Harper Lee)
A reminder of who we once were. Uncomfortable, but historically accurate. Taken at the Gold Coast Railroad Museum, Miami.
From the post, "12 minutes in segregationland." familyinequality.wordpress.com/2012/06/01/12-minutes-in-s...
Washington (AP)—The supreme court ruled Monday that the states of the nation do not have the right to separate Negro and white pupils in different public schools.
By a unanimous 9-0 vote, the high court held that such segregation of the races is unconstitutional. Chief Justice Earl Warren read the historic decision to a packed but hushed gallery of spectators nearly two years after Negro residents of four states and the District of Columbia went before the court to challenge the principle of segregation.
The ruling does not end segregation at once. Further hearings were set for this fall to decide how and when to end the practice of segregation. Thus a lengthy delay is likely before the decision is carried out.
JACKSONVILLE FL
Lynching in America
Thousands of African Americans were victims of lynching and racial violence in the United States between 1877 and 1950. The lynching of African Americans during this era was a form of racial terrorism used to intimidate Black people and enforce racial hierarchy and segregation. Racial terror lynching was most prevalent in the South, but during what became known as the Red Summer of 1919, anti-black riots erupted in over two dozen American cities in Florida, Arkansas, Georgia, Nebraska, New York, Pennsylvania, Texas, and other states. White mobs intent on protecting their economic and social dominance from growing Black communities and an increase in Black workers destroyed property and killed or injured hundreds of Black people. In this era, racial terror lynchings had become the most public form of racial terror and was frequently tolerated or even supported by law enforcement and elected officials. Racial terror lynchings generally took place in communities that had functioning criminal justice systems but chose to deny due process to racial terror lynching victims, who were frequently pulled from jails or delivered to mobs by law officers legally required to protect them, often based on mere accusations. The names of many lynching victims were not recorded or remain unknown, but at least 318 documented racial terror lynchings took place in Florida between 1877 and 1950, including 8 in Duval County.
The Lynching of Bowman Cook and John Morine
On September 8, 1919, a mob of 50 White men lynched two Black veterans of World War I, Bowman Cook and John Morine. This was during the Red Summer of 1919, when Black veterans returned from the war determined to overcome racism and discrimination at home, and many White communities responded with violence. In Jacksonville, several Black taxi drivers were killed by White riders. Jacksonville officials refused to investigate, placing Black drivers at greater risk. To protect themselves, Black cab drivers began refusing White passengers. When a White rider was refused service in mid-August, he indiscriminately fired a handgun into a crowd of Black people. In an era when accusations against Black people rarely faced scrutiny, police alleged that this man was killed on August 20 by Mr. Cook and Mr. Morine, and they were arrested. Three weeks later, before either man could stand trial, a mob abducted them from the Duval County Jail, drove them to North Main Street and Cemetery Road, and fatally shot
them. They left Mr. Morine's body in a ditch, then dragged Mr. Cook's corpse behind a car for nearly 50 blocks before dumping his mangled remains on Hogan Street near the Confederate monument in Hemming Park. Lynchings and public mutilations were intended to enforce white supremacy, and lynch mobs would sometimes abandon the victim's body in a prominent space. No one was ever arrested or charged for lynching Bowman Cook and John Morine.
Is this segregation? Welsh speaking children to the left, non Welsh speaking children to the right - and keep your distance!
Beyond Planetary Apartheid - Planetary Gentrification- institutionalised segregation with Loretta Lees at ISCTE-IUL on may 10th 2018.
A CEI-IUL Organization.
Fotografia de Hugo Alexandre Cruz.
Back door which led to the porter's quarters in the St. Thomas, train station. Because they were African American, they had bunks (5 high), in a separate section of the building. They laid over here waiting for their next train.
Segregation, discrimination, and racism were not just southern issues; they were alive in the North as well. In Omaha, newspapers such as The Monitor and The Guide helped to bring attention to these issues in the early 20th century; by the late 1930s The Omaha Star was fighting the fight. The Omaha Star was the voice of the African-American community and was involved in the civil rights movement, fighting discrimination and racial injustice. One of their battles was getting African-American teachers hired in Omaha Public Schools. During the Civil Rights era, some leaders within Omaha Public Schools thought African-Americans were not qualified to be teachers and only let them teach in predominantly African-American schools. This article from 1946 represents how The Omaha Star brought attention to this injustice, and ultimately won the battle they had been fighting for a long time. Both in the past and in the present, African-American newspapers play a large role in voicing the concerns of the community.
The Postcard
A postally unused postcard published by Tribe of K, Gary, Indiana. The photograph was taken by Daugherty.
The Froebel School Strike
On the 18th. September 1945, hundreds of white students at Froebel School walked out of their classes to protest against the presence of African-American students at the institution.
According to the Gary Post-Tribune, the striking students “Urged that Froebel school be reserved for whites only” or that they be transferred to other schools themselves.
While the conflict between segregation and integration was far from new, the student strike in Gary would call into question the very values the United States fought to uphold during World War II, which had formally ended just two weeks before the “hate strike.”
The Interdenominational Ministerial Alliance, composed of black ministers, made this point clear when it issued its “Appeal to reason” to the citizens of Gary, Indiana:
'It is indeed regrettable to note that after
the nation has spent approximately 190
billion dollars, the colored citizens of Gary
have sent about 4,000 of their sons, brothers,
and husbands to battlefields around the world
and have supported every war effort that our
government has called upon us to support,
in a united effort to destroy Nazism and to
banish from the face of the earth all that Hitler,
Mussolini, and Tojo stood for; to find in our
midst those who are endeavoring to spread
disunity, race-hatred, and Hitlerism in our
community'.
(Gary Post-Tribune, 20th. September 1945)
Urban Planning's Paavo Monkkonen hosts the International Symposium on Segregation and Neighborhood Effects on the UCLA campus on June 6, 2017. Presentations by Monkkonen and UCLA Luskin colleague Michael Lens were part of a daylong series of discussions about recent research. Photos by Les Dunseith
Segregation/Integration
Given the rise in trend over the usage of the term ‘cultural appropriation’ in recent years. The line between appropriation and appreciation becomes increasingly blurred. At what point do we cross the line into offence?
As such, are these accusations bridging into the absurd and causing more harm than good? Is this entire debate encouraging segregation over integration?
leekhbenjamin@gmail.com
This is the tomb of Homer Plessy. He went to court in the 1890's to fight segregation on trains. The US Supreme Court upheld the local law requiring segregation, and by extension all racial segregation laws across the country in Plessy versus Ferguson in 1896. This was not overturned until the 1950's.