LIfe was harder in general for simply existing with a different colored skin in America. Black people were expected to cower and obey anyone who was white, no matter their gender, age, or relation to them. They were exploited and used for physical labor at a cheap fee, taking the low and dirty jobs that no white citizen wanted. Segregated restaurants, pools, stores, and neighborhoods made everyday life hard, and not only was there nothing to be done about it, most would be looked down upon for even disagreeing with segregation in the first place. “Maycomb’s Ewells lived behind the town garbage dump in what was one a Negro cabin.” (170). The only homes in Maycomb (the town in which the novel takes place in) that are shabby, gross, and behind a dump are specifically for the town ‘Negros”. The state of these homes are very unlike the nicer ones within the town, as shown in the following quote; “The cabins plank walls were supplemented with tin cans hammer flat … It's windows were merely open spaces in the walls.” (170). There it can be seen how sad and poor people of color lived and were treated, so much that it affected their lives and living situation as well as their