Modern Georgia
MISC
The New South
The 20th Century
Civil War
100

Baptist minister and president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), was the most prominent African American leader in the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s.

Martin Luther King, Jr.

100

A war that takes place between two groups in the same country. America had one of these from 1861-1865.

Civil War

100

This was a disenfranchising tactic that required voters to pay a fee in order to vote.

Poll Tax

100

This insect destroyed cotton crops in Georgia by laying its eggs in the cotton bolls. 

Boll Weevil 

100

Supreme Court ruling that declared slaves were not citizens of the United States.

Dred Scott Case (1857)

200

Primary election where only whites could vote.

White Primary

200

This amendment gave Black men the right to vote after the civil war

The 15th Ammendment

200

The mass migration of six million Black people to the North between the years 1910-1970.

Great Migration

200

These laws were named after a racist black caricature and denied Black people rights in the south and maintained segregation from the end of reconstruction until after Brown vs. Board in 1954.  

Jim Crow Laws

200

This Ammedment gave African American men the right to vote after the civil war.

15th Ammendment

300

This Supreme Court cases struck down the policy of separate but equal and mandated the desegregation of public schools.

Brown v. Board of Education

300

Atlanta’s longest serving mayor who was instrumental in bring aviation to the city and worked with civil rights leaders during the civil rights movement.

William Hartsfield

300

Managing editor for the Atlanta Journal who promoted the idea of a “New South.”

Henry Grady 

300

This was a surprise attack on an American Naval base in Hawaii by Japanese forces; resulted in the U.S. entering WWII.

Pearl Harbor

300

This organization's purpose was to provide aid to former slaves and poor whites during reconstruction.

What is the Freedman's Bureau?

400

This Mayor of Atlanta brought three major sports teams to Atlanta (Braves, Falcons, and Hawks) and was the first to refer to Atlanta as "a city too busy to hate."

Ivan Allen Jr. 

400

Farmers who agreed to work on a landowner’s property in exchange for land, farming equipment, and seed; sharecroppers were required to provide the land owner with a share of the crop.

Sharecroppers

400

Three powerful Georgia politicians (Joseph E. Brown, Alfred H. Colquitt, and John B. Gordon) dominated Georgia politics for over 20 years were reffered to by this name. 

The Bourbon Triumvirate

400

The goal of this movement was to end all forms of discrimination in Albany Georgia. It was founded by members of the NAACP, SNCC, and SCLC. 

The Albany Movement

400

Infamous Civil War prisoner-of-war camp in Macon County, Georgia. Over 13,000 Union soldiers died in the camp.

Andersonville

500

Investigation by lawyer John Sibley to determine what should be done about integration in the state; though 60% of Georgians claimed they would rather close the public schools than integrate, Sibley recommended that public schools desegregate on a limited basis.

Sibley Commission

500

These were the three reasons for Georgia's founding as stated in the Charter of 1732

Philanthropy, Economics, and Defense

500

This Supreme Court case established the separate but equal doctrine thus promoting segregation.

Plessy V. Ferguson

500

Four time Georgia governor that fought against Roosevelt’s New Deal policies.  

Eugene Talmadge

500

An agreement between the North and South that allowed California to enter the union in exchange for the passage of the Fugitive Slave Act.

Compromise of 1850