The Scottsboro trials were horrendous and showed the cruelty of racism within the 1930’s. For example, in a video Carol Anderson explains that when the two white woman yelled “rape” the nine black boys get taken into custody instantly. This proves that people did not trust those boys just because they were a different race. People did not even take the time to ask the women which man raped them and the basic questions about the rape. Furthermore, they do not even take the boys side of events; They…
Words 255 - Pages 2
many similarities between the Scottsboro trial and the trial of Tom Robinson in the novel, To Kill a Mockingbird. “No crime in American history—let alone a crime that never occurred—produced as many trials, convictions, reversals, and retrials as did an alleged gang rape of two white girls by nine black teenagers on a Southern railroad freight run on March 25, 1931” (Linder 1). The author of To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee, was a young girl during the Scottsboro trial and based the trial of Tom…
Words 941 - Pages 4
events that created the tragic case of the “Scottsboro Boys”: a case that opened the eyes of a nation. The trials of the nine young negro men was a prime example of just how horrible racial prejudice could get. No other case in American history created as many retrials, convictions, reversions, and controversy as the Scottsboro case. The case itself lasted almost a decade, which was enough time to earn its rightful title as an “American tragedy.” The scottsboro trials not only highlighted racism in the…
Words 1188 - Pages 5
racism is seen in the book mainly at Tom Robinson's trial. The Ewell family represents the pride that whites had for innocent blacks. There were many cases like the Tom Robinson case, an important one is the Scottsboro Boys, which took over 20 years to solve. The court rulings in the early 1900’s were based on race and the trial of Tom Robinson in “To Kill A Mockingbird” by Harper Lee gives us a glimpse of how horrific racial inequality was for African-Americans. In the book, Tom Robinson was found…
Words 839 - Pages 4
1930’s Alabama was a dangerous place for black men and women alike. It was even more dangerous for black men convicted of rape. That’s what happened to the Scottsboro boys. They were accused by 2 white girls of rape. They were convicted by a biased and unfair judge. They were thrown in prison. All of this happened because of the level of racial bias that existed then. It was indeed one of the largest prevailing beliefs that blacks were more violent, and less trustworthy than whites. That they were…
Words 164 - Pages 1
The first connection in the United States history is the presence of the Jim Crow laws in To Kill A Mockingbird. Jim Crow is a bundle of laws that caused a big issues back in 1877 and the mid 1960’s. People believed these laws were needed because they wanted separation between whites and blacks. They also believed that these laws were needed because it would make them feel better when blacks got treated cruelly. Also a great amount of Christian ministers and theologians were taught that whites…
Words 943 - Pages 4
White Women and African American Women in the 1930s The Great Depression hit many people very hard in the 1930s. Some people lost money, jobs, and even houses. This great deficient caused many problems for most people, but affected them in different ways. White women usually did not loose everything, but had just enough to get by. Their roles in the family became much more important and some even tried to find jobs. African American women were hit even harder; there was already the issue of segregation…
Words 1918 - Pages 8
people as if they weren’t human. Scottsboro Trials In the 1930’s, America’s attention was on the Scottsboro Boys, a group of 9 black youths who were falsely accused and charged with raping 2 women in Alabama. The charging of the boys was based on false stories by people who wanted the boys to be jailed or killed after they were beaten in a fight. The case showed the barbaric treatment of blacks at this time. It all started on March 25, 1931, when the boys picked a fight with a group of white…
Words 5276 - Pages 22
Richard Wright’s Blueprint: Wisdom or Folly? Richard Wright emerges as writer when, what many call, the Harlem Renaissance came to a close in the late 1930’s. During the 1940’s and 50’s many common themes and values of African American literature began to shift. Richard Wright contributes to this shift in 1937 when he writes a bold manifesto of literary theory called Blueprint for Negro Writing. Wright’s Blueprint for Negro Writing lays down the rules Wright thinks should govern African American…
Words 1386 - Pages 6
Racial inequality has been a dilemma for years in the United States. Long after slavery was abolished, racism and discrimination was still extremely prominent within the States, especially during the early 1900s. World War I had left its mark in the form of a profound isolationist sentiment. The Depression paralyzed the economy, leaving 25 percent of the workforce unemployed. The Jim Crow Laws, strictly segregating Blacks from Whites, were still in effect in the South and racial tension was high…
Words 1157 - Pages 5