With white supremacist strategies for segregated societies solidifying in towns across America’s South, Black people needed to respond in ways that would ensure the freedoms their predecessors had fought to codify into law remained available to them.
Between 1900 and 1910, in more than two dozen cities, African Americans tried to stem the tide of their exclusion from public life by taking the fight to the streets, boycotting streetcars that divided Black and white passengers.
The pressure applied by these protests wasn’t successful in every instance, but the victories that were won inspired continued activism and pushback against the expansion of Jim Crow laws across the nation.
---
Episode Artwork by Lyne Lucien. Transcripts, resources and more available at seizingfreedom.com.
---
This episode of Seizing Freedom is supported by Home. Made., a podcast that explores the meaning of home and what it can teach us about ourselves and each other. Listen to episodes of Home. Made. at https://link.chtbl.com/homemade?sid=podcast.seizingfreedom
Interview: Kate Masur
The Final Word On Liberty
Interview: Kelly Brown Douglas
Equal Children Of God
Interview: Hilary Green
Truth Makes The Free Man
Interview: Tera Hunter
They Can't Keep Me Out
A New Joy Awaiting Me
Interview: Deborah Willis
Reconstructing Family
Interview: Abigail Cooper
A Bedrock For Freedom
Interview: Crystal Feimster
A Powerful Black Hand
Intro: Time For A New Story
Spotlight: Ambrose Headen
Spotlight: Cyntha Nickols
Spotlight: Susie King Taylor
Seizing Freedom: Official Trailer
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Freakonomics Radio
No Stupid Questions
The Atlas Obscura Podcast
Tell Me Something I Don’t Know
People I (Mostly) Admire