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Essay On The Scottsboro Boys

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Making African American History

In 1931, nine black boys were falsely accused of allegedly raping two white girls on a train in Scottsboro, Alabama. In all actuality, the Scottsboro Boys were minding their own business when a white man stepped on Haywood Patterson’s hand which led to a fight between the two groups of boys. The black boys won the fight and threw the others off of the train, but were met by police at the next stop who were told by two white women that they had been raped. Those boys were found guilty and had a retrial several times, they even went to the Supreme Court twice just to become free. Only one of the boys was never found not guilty and that was Haywood Patterson, so he ended up escaping prison to finally become free from the grasps of Alabama. The PBS short film on the Scottsboro Boys had displayed the impact of the Scottsboro Boys on African American history. To begin with, the Scottsboro Trials had a great deal of impact on the way the legal system was ran in the United States of America. Black defendants were allowed the right to have a fair case, and to make this happen they would have half of the jury be black. That right had to be passed on because of the fact that there were way …show more content…
The boys were not acquitted from their supposed crimes a lot earlier, because of the fact that they were black. Everyone thought they had committed the crime because they were black and they were sure that the poor white girls weren’t telling a lie. No matter how stupid the two girls accounts of the rape were the Scottsboro Boys were still guilty. Basically, at that time if a white person ever got into trouble over something or had the possibility of getting in trouble, they would simply blame it on the nearest black person. Racism was something that was very crude during that time period, and it still has not completely diminished to this

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