18a lecture 18 on west and south gilded age

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Chapter 18 Life in the South and West in the Gilded Age

Transcript of 18a lecture 18 on west and south gilded age

Chapter 18

Life in the South and West in the Gilded Age

African American

Chapter 18

I. African American

a. Life in the South

b. Life in the West

c. Reformers

II. Chinese

III. Indian

discrimination

Chapter 18

I. African American

a. Life in the South

b. Life in the West

c. Reformers

II. Chinese

III. Indian

discrimination

Chapter 18

I. African American

a. Life in the South

b. Life in the West

c. Reformers

II. Chinese

III. Indian

reformers

Chapter 18

I. African American

a. Life in the South

b. Life in the West

c. Reformers

II. Chinese

III. Indian

“Dignify and glorify common labor. It is at the bottom of life

that we must begin, not at the

top.”

“The power of the ballot we need in sheer defense, else what shall save us from a second slavery?”

Booker T Washington

WEB DuBois

Chinese

Chapter 18

I. African American

II. Chinesea. Background

b. Life in the West

c. Discrimination

III. Indian

Roots of racism

Chapter 18

I. African American

II. Chinesea. Background

b. Life in the West

c. Discrimination

III. Indian

“The yellow terror in all his

glory”

“Melican Man”

Roots of racism

Chapter 18

I. African American

II. Chinesea. Background

b. Life in the West

c. Discrimination

III. Indian

discrimination

Chapter 18

I. African American

II. Chinesea. Background

b. Life in the West

c. Discrimination

I. Indian

indian

Chapter 18

I. African American

II. Chinese

I. Indiana. Background

b. Discrimination

c. Reformers

“Lo the poor Indian! Whose untutored mind sees grafters on

borth sides, before, behind” - 1913

Roots of racism

Chapter 18

I. African American

II. Chinese

I. Indiana. Background

b. Plains Wars

c. Reformers

discrimination

Chapter 18

I. African American

II. Chinese

I. Indiana. Background

b. Plains Wars

c. Reformers

reformers

Chapter 18

I. African American

II. Chinese

I. Indiana. Background

b. Discrimination

c. Reformers

It makes little difference, however, where one opens the

record of the history of the Indians; every

page and every year has its dark stain.

I wish it to be remembered that I was the last man of

my tribe to surrender my rifle.

Helen Hunt Jackson

Sitting Bull

Watch We Shall Remain Excerpt Video