Sign from Doctor's Office, "Colored Entrance in Rear," circa 1950
THF153471 / Sign from Doctor's Office, "Colored Entrance in Rear," circa 1950
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Artifact Overview
"Jim Crow" laws separated blacks from whites in all aspects of daily life. Favoring whites and repressing blacks, these become an institutionalized form of inequality. Through separate (and inferior) public facilities like building entrances, elevators, cashier windows, and drinking fountains, African Americans were reminded everywhere of their second-class status. These practices were finally outlawed by the 1964 Civil Rights Act.
Artifact Details
Artifact
Sign (Notice)
Date Made
circa 1950
Place of Creation
Location
Not on exhibit to the public.
Object ID
91.145.1
Credit
From the Collections of The Henry Ford. Gift of Mr. Albert A. Ward, Ed.D.
Material
Wood (Plant material)
Color
White (Color)
Black (Color)
Dimensions
Height: 1 in
Width: 4 in
Length: 16 in
Inscriptions
on front:
COLORED ENTRANCE / IN REAR
handwritten on back:
Albert A. Ward / 1954 / Columbus, Georgia
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Related Content
SetDay of Courage: Segregation
- 10 Artifacts
This sheet music includes the music and lyrics for a minstrel show and the image of a blackface character. Minstrel shows generally featured white actors wearing black makeup (known as blackface) who portrayed racist stereotypes of African Americans through singing and dancing. American audiences considered these shows comical and attended minstrel shows for over a century, from the live theater of the early 1800s to the films of the early-20th century. They even appeared in mid-20th century children's cartoons. The lyrics on this sheet are attributed to Thomas Dartmouth Rice (1808-1860), who introduced the character "Jim Crow", a stereotypical African American, in 1832. The cover image may also depict Rice, an American singer, dancer, and composer, one of the first well-known blackface performers. The "Jimmy Crow" song made Rice internationally famous. The song's popularity first brought the term into the American language as derogatory slang referring to African Americans. "Jim Crow" eventually referred to the two separate societies - one black, one white - followed throughout the United States. This system was formalized in the South by state laws passed in the late-19th century. Blacks and whites could not sit in the same waiting rooms, use the same bathrooms or eat in the same restaurants, for example. Not until the Civil Rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s was segregation outlawed.
article"To Establish the Rule of Justice": 60 Years of the Civil Rights Act of 1964
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