Race and Place: An African-American Community in the Jim Crow South: Charlottesville, VA

Race and Place is an archive about the racial segregation laws, or the 'Jim Crow' laws from the late 1880s until the mid-twentieth century. The focus of the collection is the town of Charlottesville in Virginia. The Jim Crow laws segregated African-Americans from white Americans in public places such as schools, and school buses. The archive contains photos, letters, two regional census' and a flash map of the town of Charlottesville. The Jim Crow laws were not overturned until the important Brown versus Board of Education court ruling in 1954 (but not totally eliminated until the Civil Rights Act of the 1964). The project intends to connect race with place by understanding what it was like to live, work, pray, learn, and play in the segregated South. We plan to develop manuscript collections and oral histories of African Americans in the segregation period, and construct the social, political, and economic history to understand race in the context of place.
Publisher
Hosting / Distributor

The Virginia Center for Digital History - University of Virginia: Charlottesville, US (VA) <http://www.vcdh.virginia.edu/>

Language

Country

United States

Editors Information
Published on
20.03.2002
Contributor
Thomas Meyer
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