AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY

Course Description: Students will examine the life and contributions of African Americans from the early 1600s through the contemporary United States. Students will explore the influence of geography on slavery and the growth of slavery in the U.S. Students will consider urban and rural African American communities and institutions in the North and South leading up to and during the Civil War. Students will investigate the rise of Jim Crow and the subsequent effects of the laws and trace the impact of African American migration through the early 20th century. Students will explore the impact of the Harlem Renaissance as well as the contributions of African Americans during the Great Depression and World War II. Students will examine the successes and failures of the Civil Rights Movement and consider the contemporary issues confronting African Americans. 

This course and the following standards are written in accordance with T.C.A. § 49-6-1006. 

Demographic Information

Are you a current Tennessee resident?Mandatory field

The Beginnings of Slavery and the Slave Trade (pre-1619)

AAH.01: Analyze the economic, political, and social reasons for focusing the slave trade on Africa, including the roles of: Africans, Europeans, and colonists.


AAH.02: Analyze the role of geography on the growth and development of slavery.


AAH.03: Assess the impact of the slave trade on West Africa and North American colonies.


AAH.04: Explain why the Middle Passage is considered to be one of the largest forced migrations in human history.


African American Life Prior to the Civil War (1619-1860)

AAH.05: Analyze the economic, social, religious, and legal justifications for the establishment and continuation of slavery.


AAH.06: Describe the varied experiences of free blacks in colonial America.


AAH.07: Identify the various ways Africans in the U.S. resisted slavery as well as their ability to buy their freedom.


AAH.08: Analyze the role slavery played in the development of nationalism and sectionalism, including the fugitive slave laws.


AAH.09: Assess the development of the abolitionist movement and its impact on slavery and the nation, including the efforts of: • American Colonial Society • Frederick Douglass • Ralph Waldo Emerson • William Lloyd Garrison • Sojourner Truth • Harriet Tubman


AAH.10: Explain the Underground Railroad, and assess its impact on slavery in the U.S.


AAH.11: Compare and contrast African American communities in the North and South, with emphasis on those in rural and urban areas.


AAH.12: Describe and analyze various experiences of African American families in the Antebellum U.S.


AAH.13: Describe the development of African American institutions, such as religion, education, and benevolent organizations, during this era.


AAH.14: Identify and explain contributions to science and the arts from African Americans during this era.


African Americans during the Civil War and Reconstruction (1861-1890s)

AAH.15: Describe President Abraham Lincoln's evolving views on slavery.


AAH.16: Describe the changing status of slaves, freed slaves, and free blacks during and after the Civil War.


AAH.17: Identify and explain the roles of African American soldiers, spies, and slaves in the war effort in both the North and the South, including the 54th Massachusetts Regiment and the 13th U.S. Colored Troops.


AAH.18: Identify reasons for and effects of the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments on African Americans.


AAH.19: Analyze the effects of Reconstruction on the legal, political, social, cultural, educational, and economic life of freedmen.


AAH.20: Assess the successes and failures of Reconstruction as they relate to African Americans.


African American Life after Emancipation through World War I (1890s-1920s)

AAH.21: Assess the economic and social impact of Jim Crow laws on African Americans.


AAH.22: Analyze the legal ramifications of segregation laws and court decisions (e.g., Plessy v. Ferguson) on American society.


AAH.23: Compare and contrast organized responses to Jim Crow laws (e.g., the Niagara Movement, the NAACP, the Urban League, the Atlanta compromise, the Farmers’ Alliance, Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, and the anti-lynching crusade).


AAH.24: Identify influential African Americans of the time period, and analyze their impact on American and Tennessee society (e.g., Robert R. Church, Samuel McElwee, Randolph Miller, James Napier, Ida B. Wells).


AAH.25: Describe the progress of African American institutions, such as religion, education, and benevolent organizations, during this era.


AAH.26: Describe the economic, cultural, political, and social impact of African American migration within and from the South (e.g., Exodusters, Benjamin “Pap” Singleton, First Great Migration).


AAH.27: Identify the achievements of African American inventors and entrepreneurs of the period (e.g., George Washington Carver, Garrett Morgan, Madam C.J. Walker).


AAH.28: Describe the impact of African American regiments on the western campaigns, the Spanish-American War, and World War I.


AAH.29: Describe the African American experience during and after World War I (e.g., economic opportunities, Second Great Migration, resurgence of Ku Klux Klan).


African Americans and the Harlem Renaissance (1920s-1930s)

AAH.30: Identify literary contributions made by African Americans during this era (e.g., Countee Cullen, Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston).


AAH.31: Describe the contributions of African Americans to the performing arts during this era (e.g., DeFord Bailey, Duke Ellington, Fisk Jubilee Singers, W.C. Handy, James Weldon Johnson, John Work III).


AAH.32: Describe the contributions of African Americans to the visual arts during this era, including the work of William Edmondson.


AAH.33: Analyze the influence of the Harlem Renaissance on American culture.


African American Life during the Great Depression and World War II (1930s-1940s)

AAH.34: Analyze the impact of the Great Depression and the New Deal on the lives of African Americans.


AAH.35: Describe highlights of African American culture of the 1930s and 1940s (e.g., Satchel Page and Negro league baseball, Cab Calloway, Mississippi Delta blues musicians).


AAH.36: Identify the contributions of African Americans who served in the military, and compare their experiences to other Americans who served in World War II.


AAH.37: Describe the experience of African Americans at home during and after World War II.


AAH.38: Explain how World War II laid the groundwork for the modern Civil Rights Movement (e.g., President Franklin D. Roosevelt's Executive Order 8802, CORE, President Harry S. Truman's integration of the military, Columbia Race Riots).


The Modern Civil Rights Movement (1950s-1960s)

AAH.39: Explain how legal victories prior to 1954 inspired and propelled the Civil Rights Movement.


AAH.40: Describe the impact of Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas, and evaluate the resistance to the decision and the reactions that followed.


AAH.41: Describe various methods employed by African Americans to obtain civil rights.


AAH.42: Summarize the Civil Rights Movement in Tennessee, including: the integration of Clinton High School, sit-ins in Nashville, and the activities of Diane Nash and Jim Lawson.


AAH.43: Identify various organizations and their roles in the Civil Rights Movement (e.g., Black Panthers, Highlander Folk School, SNCC).


AAH.44: Identify legal victories of the Civil Rights Movement (e.g., Civil Rights Act of 1964, Voting Rights Act of 1965, 24th Amendment).


AAH.45: Assess the extent to which the Civil Rights Movement transformed American politics and society.


AAH.46: Discuss the impact of the Vietnam War on the Civil Rights Movement.


African American Issues in Contemporary Times (1970s-present)

AAH.47: Identify and analyze how the changing political environment has impacted civil rights.


AAH.48: Describe how African Americans have responded to or engaged in political conservatism.


AAH.49: Compare and contrast the responses of African Americans to the economic, social, and political challenges in the contemporary U.S.


AAH.50: Identify and evaluate major contemporary African American issues confronting society (e.g., affirmative action, educational achievement gap, wealth gap, poverty, AIDS, drug epidemic, crime).


AAH.51: Analyze the impact of immigration and migration on the lives of African Americans in the contemporary U.S.


AAH.52: Identify the major contributions of contemporary African Americans in business, education, the arts, politics, sports, science, technology, and society in general, including those of: • President Barack Obama • Condoleezza Rice • Wilma Rudolph • Tina Turner • Oprah Winfrey


Additional Standards