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✊🏿African American History – 1865 to Present Unit 4 Review

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4.4 The impact of the Great Depression on African Americans

✊🏿African American History – 1865 to Present
Unit 4 Review

4.4 The impact of the Great Depression on African Americans

Written by the Fiveable Content Team • Last updated September 2025
Written by the Fiveable Content Team • Last updated September 2025
✊🏿African American History – 1865 to Present
Unit & Topic Study Guides

The Great Depression hit African American communities hard. Unemployment soared, poverty deepened, and racial inequalities worsened. Many faced discrimination in relief programs and housing, while violence persisted. Migration patterns shifted as people sought better opportunities.

African American leaders fought back. The NAACP battled discrimination, while the Urban League provided job training. Artists and intellectuals raised awareness. Though limited by resistance and lack of resources, their efforts laid groundwork for future civil rights struggles.

Economic and Social Impact

Economic impact on African American communities

  • Disproportionately high unemployment rates
    • African Americans often first to be laid off and last to be rehired due to racial discrimination in the workforce
    • Many African Americans worked in industries heavily affected by the economic downturn (agriculture, domestic service)
  • Increased poverty and hardship
    • Loss of income and limited access to relief programs led to widespread poverty among African American families
    • Malnutrition and poor living conditions became more prevalent in African American communities (overcrowding, lack of basic amenities)
  • Migration patterns shifted
    • Some African Americans migrated from rural areas to cities in search of better job opportunities (Chicago, New York)
    • Others returned to the South from northern cities due to lack of jobs and resources in urban centers
  • Strained family dynamics
    • Financial stress and unemployment put pressure on family relationships, leading to increased domestic tensions
    • Some families forced to separate or send children to live with relatives to cope with economic hardship (kinship networks)

Racial Inequalities and Discrimination

Exacerbation of racial inequalities

  • Unequal access to relief programs
    • Discrimination in the administration of relief programs (Works Progress Administration, Civilian Conservation Corps)
    • African Americans often received lower wages and were assigned to less desirable jobs compared to white counterparts in government programs
  • Housing segregation and discrimination worsened
    • Redlining practices limited African American access to home ownership and better housing conditions in many cities
    • Overcrowding and poor living conditions in segregated neighborhoods worsened during the Depression (lack of sanitation, dilapidated buildings)
  • Racial violence and lynching persisted
    • Economic stress and competition for limited resources fueled racial tensions, particularly in the South
    • Lynching and other forms of racial violence continued to terrorize African American communities (Tuskegee Institute records)

New Deal programs for African Americans

  • Limited benefits for African Americans
    • New Deal programs (Agricultural Adjustment Act, National Recovery Administration) often excluded or provided limited benefits to African Americans
    • Sharecroppers and tenant farmers, many of whom were African American, did not receive direct aid from agricultural programs designed to support white landowners
  • Positive impacts of select programs
    • The WPA and the CCC provided some employment opportunities for African Americans, although often in segregated units and with lower pay than white workers
    • The Public Works Administration funded the construction of schools, hospitals, and housing projects that benefited African American communities (Harlem River Houses)
  • Influence on political mobilization
    • New Deal programs helped to increase African American political awareness and participation, despite limitations
    • The election of President Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Democratic Party's growing support for civil rights issues began to shift African American voting patterns (black voters moving away from the Republican Party)

African American Leadership and Advocacy

Advocacy of African American leaders

  • Role of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP)
    • The NAACP continued to fight against racial discrimination and segregation during the Great Depression
    • Lobbied for anti-lynching legislation and fair labor practices to protect African American workers
  • Efforts of the National Urban League
    • Focused on providing job training, employment services, and relief programs for African Americans in urban areas hit hard by the economic crisis
    • Worked to improve housing conditions and combat discrimination in housing and employment (boycotts, legal challenges)
  • Prominence of African American intellectuals and artists
    • Figures such as Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, and Richard Wright used their platforms to raise awareness of African American struggles and advocate for social change
    • The Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s and early 1930s celebrated African American culture and creativity, providing a foundation for continued activism (literature, music, art)
  • Limitations and challenges faced
    • African American leaders and organizations often faced resistance from white politicians and limited resources to implement change
    • The scale of the economic crisis and deeply entrenched racial inequalities posed significant challenges to their efforts to achieve racial equality