Across
- 2. state and local laws that enforced racial segregation in the Southern The United States.
- 7. the economic shift from an exclusively agrarian society to one that embraced industrial development
- 8. hostility to or prejudice against Jewish people.
- 10. first president of Atlanta Life Insurance Company. One of the first black millionares in the united states.
- 11. three powerful Georgian Democratic leaders; Joseph E. Brown, Henry Grady, and John B. Gordon
- 14. The first African American to get a Ph.D. at Harvard University, established himself as a leading thinker on race and the plight of Black Americans.
- 15. the first president and principal developer of Tuskegee normal and Industrial Institute
- 18. manufacturing facility where different types of fibers are produced
- 19. an organized association of workers, often in a trade or profession, formed to protect and further their rights and interests.
- 20. American journalist and speaker who helped bring about industrial development in the South
Down
- 1. A US political party that sought to represent the interests of farmers and laborers in the 1890s
- 3. Violent attacks by armed mobs of White Americans against African Americans in Atlanta
- 4. systematic separation of people into racial or other ethnic groups in daily life. During reconstruction white and blacks were segregated, whites would get better facilities and things.
- 5. a person who comes to live permanently in a foreign country
- 6. planned to show the progress made since the city's destruction during the Battle of Atlanta and new developments in cotton Production
- 9. a leader who sought to help poor farmers as a leader of the Populist Party. He later was turned, into a white supremacist and racist.
- 12. the development of industries in a country or region on a wide Scale.
- 13. landmark decision of the U.S. Supreme Court in which the the court ruled that racial segregation laws did not violate the U.S. Constitution
- 16. the state of being deprived of a right or privilege, especiallythe right to vote.
- 17. a Jewish man and factory superintendent who was wrongly convicted in 1913 of the murder of a 13-year-old employee.
