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100

Slavery

Slavery is when people are forced to work for others without being paid and without their consent.

100

Rosa Parks


Rosa Parks was an African American woman who became famous for her role in the Civil Rights Movement. In 1955, she made history when she refused to give up her seat on a bus to a white person.

100

Martin Luther King Jr.

Martin Luther King Jr. was one of the most important leaders for the Civil Rights Movement in the United States. He fought for racial equality.

100

The KKK

The Ku Klux Klan is a white supremacist group that was founded in the US to prevent rights of African Americans after the Civil War ended. 

200

Lynching

The act of killing someone for an alleged crime without a legal trial, for example the murder of Emmett Till. 

200

Harriet Tubman

An abolitionist and former slave that has become famous for her involvement with the operations of the Underground Railroad.

200

Segregation

The act of separating people based on race or ethnicity, usually by law. In the US this occurred with African Americans. 

200

Branding

Practice where slaves were poked with red hot iron to mark them as property and humiliate them.

300

Civil War

The civil war broke out in the US between the North and the South mostly because the South wanted to keep slaves while the North wanted to forbid it.

300

Atlantic Slave Trade 

A trade route over the sea where they transported slaves from Africa to America and raw materials like cotton and sugar from America to Europe. Europe manufactured products like textiles and guns which they sent to Africa.

300

Civil Rights Movement

A social and political movement that aimed to gain equal rights for African Americans in the US. 

300

Cotton Gin

Machine that revolutionized the production of cotton and led to an expansion of both plantations and enslaved people.

400

Jim Crow Laws

Jim Crow laws were local laws in the United States that enforced racial segregation and discrimination against African Americans, primarily in the Southern states, from the late 1800s until the 1960s.

400

Abolitionist

An abolitionist is a person who fights to end slavery. They believe slavery is wrong and that it should be forbidden.

400

Civil Rights Act

Laws from the 1960s that banned racial discrimination, such as segregation in public spaces. 

400

Underground Railroad

Secret network of routes, safe houses, and individuals that helped enslaved African Americans escape from the South to freedom in the North or Canada up until the Civil War.


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