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This article in the Topeka Colored Citizen argues that, while many Northerners believed that the Civil War had ended, Southerners continued to deny blacks their rights. It also includes an excerpt from some newspapers in Mississippi that discuss this matter; one even states that "blacks have no right under the sun to vote."
Creator: Topeka Colored Citizen
Date: December 21, 1878
This perspective is interesting because it ties the current treatment of blacks to conditions prior to the war, allowing students to follow change over time. It is also one of the few sources that deals specifically with black disfranchisement.
KS:7th:3.5:Exodusters (2005)
Item Number: 210629
Call Number: Microfilm: T1031
KSHS Identifier: DaRT ID: 210629
Collections - Library
Curriculum - 7th Grade Standards - Kansas History Standards - 1860s to 1870s (Benchmark 3) - Exodusters (Indicator 5) - Black perspectives on emigration
Curriculum - 7th Grade Standards - Kansas History Standards - 1860s to 1870s (Benchmark 3) - Exodusters (Indicator 5) - Jim Crow laws in the South
Curriculum - 7th Grade Standards - Kansas History Standards - 1860s to 1870s (Benchmark 3) - Exodusters (Indicator 5) - Reasons behind emigration
Date - 1870s - 1878
Government and Politics - Political Parties - Democrat
Government and Politics - Reform and Protest - Suffrage - Blacks
Objects and Artifacts - Communication Artifacts - Documentary Artifact - Newspaper - clipping
People - African Americans - Discrimination
Places - Cities and towns - Topeka
Places - Counties - Shawnee
Places - Other States - Mississippi
Type of Material - Newspapers - Clippings
http://www.kansasmemory.org/item/210629