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Great Migration (African American) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Great Migration (African American)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The states in blue had the ten largest net gains of African Americans, while the states in red had the ten largest net losses.
The states in blue had the ten largest net gains of African Americans, while the states in red had the ten largest net losses.[1]
See also: Second Great Migration (African American)

The Great Migration was the movement of approximately seven million African Americans out of the Southern United States to the North, Midwest and West from 1910 to 1970. Precise estimates of the number of migrants depend on the time frame. African Americans migrated to escape racism, seek employment opportunities in industrial cities, and to get better education for their children, all of which were widely perceived as leading to a better life. Some historians differentiate between the Great Migration (1910-1940), numbering about 1.6 million migrants, and the Second Great Migration, from 1940-1970. In the Second Migration five million or more people relocated but migrants moved to more new places. Many moved from Texas and Louisiana to California where there were jobs in the defense industry. From 1965-1970, 14 states of the South, especially Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi, contributed to a large net migration of blacks to the other three Census-designated regions of the United States.[2]

Since then scholars have noted a reverse migration underway that gathered strength through the last 35 years of the 20th century. It has been named the New Great Migration and identified in visible demographic changes since 1965. Most of the data is from 1965-2000. The data encompasses the movement of African Americans back to the South following de-industrialization in Northeastern and Midwestern cities, the growth of high-quality jobs in the "New South", and improving racial relations in the South. Many people moved back because of family and kinship ties. From 1995-2000, Georgia, Texas and Maryland were the states that attracted the most black college graduates. While California was for decades a net gaining state for black migrants, in the late 1990s it lost more African Americans than it gained.[3]

See also: New Great Migration

Contents

[edit] Causes

When the Emancipation Proclamation was signed in 1863, less than eight percent of the African American population lived in the Northeast or Midwest. In 1900, approximately ninety percent of African-Americans resided in former slave-holding states. Most African Americans migrated to New York, Philadelphia, Boston, Baltimore, Minneapolis, Detroit, Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Louis, Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, and Cleveland, as well as to many smaller industrial cities such as Buffalo and Flint to name a few. People tended to take the cheapest rail ticket possible. This resulted in, for example, people from Mississippi moving to Chicago and people from Texas moving to Los Angeles.[citation needed]

Between 1910 and 1930, the African American population rose by about twenty percent in Northern states, mostly in the biggest cities. Cities such as Chicago, Detroit, New York, and Cleveland had some of the biggest increases in the early part of the century. Because changes were concentrated in cities, urban tensions rose as African Americans and new or recent European immigrants, chiefly from rural societies, competed for jobs and housing with the white working class.

African Americans moved as individuals or small family groups. There was no government assistance, but sometimes northern industries recruited people. The primary factor for immigration was the racial climate in the South and terrorism from the KKK. In the North, there were better schools and adult men could vote (joined by women after 1920). Burgeoning industries meant there were job opportunities.

  1. African-Americans left to escape the discrimination and racial segregation of late 19th century constitutions and Jim Crow laws.
  2. The boll weevil infestation of Southern cotton fields in the late 1910s forced many sharecroppers and laborers to search for alternative employment opportunities.
  3. The enormous expansion of war industries created job openings for blacks—not in the factories but in service jobs vacated by new factory workers.
  4. World War I and the Immigration Act of 1924 effectively put a halt to the flow of European immigrants to the emerging industrial centers of the Northeast and Midwest, causing shortages of workers in the factories
  5. The Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 displaced hundreds of thousands of African-American farmers and farm workers
Lynchings and racially motivated murders in each decade from 1865 to 1965
Lynchings and racially motivated murders in each decade from 1865 to 1965

[edit] Effects

[edit] Demographic changes

The Great Migration of African-Americans created the first large, urban black communities in the North. It is conservatively estimated that 400,000 left the South during the two-year period of 1916-1918 to take advantage of a labor shortage created in the wake of the First World War.[4] The 20th century cultures of many of the United States' modern cities were forged in this period. For instance, in 1910, the African American population of Detroit was 6,000, by the start of the Great Depression in 1929, this figure had risen to 120,000. Other cities, such as Chicago, St. Louis, Cleveland, Baltimore, Philadelphia and New York, also experienced surges in their African-American populations. Up until WWI, they had also been receiving hundreds of thousands of new immigrants from Southern and Eastern Europe. Major industrial cities were places of numerous languages, an influx of peoples from mostly rural cultures, and staggeringly rapid change in the early decades of the 20th century.

The rapid scale of change could be seen also in Chicago. In 1900 the city had a total population of 1,698,575.[5] By 1920 Chicago had increased by more than 1 million residents. Its population of 2,701,705 included more than 1,000,000 Catholics; 800,000 foreign-born immigrants; 125,000 Jews; and 110,000 African Americans. It had fifteen breweries and 20,000 speakeasies to keep things lively during Prohibition.[6] As did some other cities, Chicago received the most African American migrants in the second wave of the Great Migration; from 1940-1960, the African American population in the city grew from 278,000 to 813,000. The South Side of Chicago was considered the black capital of America.[7]

In the South, the departure of hundreds of thousands of African Americans caused the black percentage of the population in most Southern states to decrease. In Mississippi and South Carolina, for example, blacks decreased from about 60% of the population in 1930 to about 35% by 1970.[citation needed]

[edit] Discrimination and working conditions

While the Great Migration helped educated African Americans obtain jobs, enabling a measure of class mobility, the migrants encountered significant forms of discrimination. Because so many people migrated in a short period of time, the African-American migrants were often resented by the white working class, fearing their ability to negotiate rates of pay or secure employment, was threatened by the influx of new labor competition. Sometimes those who were most fearful or resentful were the last immigrants of the 19th and new immigrants of the 20th c. In many cities, working classes tried to defend what they saw as "their" territories.

Nonetheless, African Americans made substantial gains in industrial employment, particularly in the steel, automobile, shipbuilding, and meatpacking industries. Between 1910 and 1920 the number of blacks employed in industry nearly doubled from 500,000 to 901,000.[8]

The migrants discovered racial discrimination in the North, even if it was sometimes more subtle than the South. Populations increased so rapidly among African-American migrants and new European immigrants both that there were housing shortages, and the newer groups competed even for the oldest, most rundown housing. Ethnic groups created territories they defended against change. Discrimination often kept African Americans to crowded neighborhoods, as in Chicago. More established populations of cities tended to move to newer housing as it was developing in the outskirts. Mortgage discrimination and redlining in inner city areas limited the newer African-American migrants' ability to determine their own housing, or even to get a fair price. In the long term, the National Housing Act of 1934 contributed to limiting the availability of loans to urban areas, particularly those areas inhabited by African Americans. [9]

[edit] Integration, and non-integration

As African Americans migrated, they became increasingly integrated into society. As they lived and worked more closely with whites, the divide existing between them became increasingly stark. This period marked the transition for many African Americans from lifestyles as rural farmers to urban industrial workers.

During the migration, migrants would often encounter residential discrimination in which white home owners and realtors would prevent migrants from purchasing homes or renting apartments in white neighborhoods. In addition, when blacks moved into white neighborhoods, whites would often react violently toward their new neighbors, including mass riots in front of their new neighbors' homes, bombings, and even murder. These tendencies contributed to maintaining the "racial divide" in the North, perhaps even accentuating it.

Since African-American migrants sustained many Southern cultural and linguistic traits, such cultural differences created a sense of "otherness" in terms of their reception by others who were living in the cities before them. [10] Stereotypes ascribed to "black" people during this period often were derived from the migrants' rural cultural traditions, which were maintained in stark contrast to the urban environments in which the people resided.[10]

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ The Great Migration 1920s
  2. ^ William H. Frey, "The New Great Migration: Black Americans' Return to the South, 1965-2000", The Brookings Institution, May 2004, pp.1-3, accessed 19 Mar 2008
  3. ^ William H. Frey, "The New Great Migration: Black Americans' Return to the South, 1965-2000", The Brookings Institution, May 2004, pp.1-3, accessed 19 Mar 2008
  4. ^ James Gilbert Cassedy, "African Americans and the American Labor Movement", Prologue', Summer 1997, Vol.29, No.2, accessed 14 Apr 2008
  5. ^ Gibson, Campbell (June 1998). Population of the 100 Largest Cities and Other Urban Places in the United States: 1790 to 1990. U.S. Bureau of the Census - Population Division.
  6. ^ Kenneth T. Jackson, The Ku Klux Klan in the City, 1915-1930. New York: Oxford University Press, 1967; reprint, Chicago: Elephant Press, 1992, p.93
  7. ^ "African Americans", Encyclopedia of Chicago, accessed 1 Mar 2008
  8. ^ James Gilbert Cassedy, "African Americans and the American Labor Movement", Prologue', Summer 1997, Vol.29, No.2, accessed 14 Apr 2008
  9. ^ Racialization and the State: The Housing Act of 1934 and the Creation of the Federal Housing Administration , Kevin Fox Gotham Sociological Perspectives, Vol. 43, No. 2 (Summer, 2000), pp. 291-317
  10. ^ a b ‘Ruralizing’ the City Theory, Culture, History, and Power in the Urban Environment

[edit] References

  • Arnesen, Eric. Black Protest and the Great Migration: A Brief History with Documents (2002), Bedford/St. Martin's Press, ISBN 0312391293.
  • Grossman, James R. Land of Hope: Chicago, Black Southerners, and the Great Migration (1991), University of Chicago Press, ISBN 0226309959.
  • Lemann, Nicholas. The Promised Land: The Great Black Migration and How It Changed America (1991), Vintage Press, ISBN 0679733477.
  • Scott, Emmett J., Negro Migration during the War (1920).
  • Sernett, Milton. Bound for the Promised Land: African Americans' Religion and the Great Migration (1997), Duke University Press, ISBN 0822319934.


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