Jim Crow law

Jim Crow law
U.S. Hist.
any state law discriminating against black persons. Cf. Black Code.
[1890-95, Amer.]

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Law that enforced racial segregation in the U.S. South between 1877 and the 1950s.

The term, taken from a minstrel-show routine, became a derogatory epithet for African Americans. After Reconstruction, Southern legislatures passed laws requiring segregation of whites and "persons of colour" on public transportation. These later extended to schools, restaurants, and other public places. In 1954 the U.S. Supreme Court declared segregation in public schools unconstitutional in Brown v. Board of Education; later rulings struck down other Jim Crow laws.

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United States [1877-1954]
      in U.S. history, any of the laws that enforced racial segregation in the South between the end of the formal Reconstruction period in 1877 and the beginning of a strong civil rights movement in the 1950s. Jim Crow (Rice, Thomas Dartmouth) was the name of a minstrel routine (actually Jump Jim Crow) performed beginning in 1828 by its author, Thomas Dartmouth (“Daddy”) Rice (Rice, Thomas Dartmouth), and by many imitators, including actor Joseph Jefferson (Jefferson, Joseph). The term came to be a derogatory epithet for blacks and a designation for their segregated life.

      From the late 1870s, Southern state legislatures, no longer controlled by carpetbaggers (carpetbagger) and freedmen (freedman), passed laws requiring the separation of whites from “persons of colour” in public transportation and schools. Generally, anyone of ascertainable or strongly suspected black ancestry in any degree was for this purpose a “person of colour”; the pre-Civil War distinction favouring those whose ancestry was known to be mixed—particularly the half-French “free persons of colour” in Louisiana—was abandoned. The segregation principle was extended to parks, cemeteries, theatres, and restaurants in an effort to prevent any contact between blacks and whites as equals. It was codified on local and state levels and most famously with the “separate but equal” decision of the U.S. Supreme Court in Ferguson (Plessy v. Ferguson) (1896).

      In 1954 the Supreme Court reversed Plessy (Plessy v. Ferguson) v. in Board of Education of Topeka (Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka). It declared segregation in public schools unconstitutional, and, by extension, this ruling was applied to other public facilities. In the years following, subsequent decisions struck down similar kinds of Jim Crow legislation. See also black code; racial segregation (segregation, racial).

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