The Gilded Age: Wealth, Corruption, and the New America — Fexingo History
In 1898, a year after Homer Plessy's challenge to Louisiana's Separate Car Act reached the Supreme Court, a series of lynchings in New Orleans and nearby parishes crystallized the violent enforcement of white supremacy in the Gilded Age South. This episode follows the story of Robert Charles, a Black laborer who in 1900 shot multiple police officers during a two-day manhunt, igniting a white mob that murdered dozens of Black residents. We also look at the 1898 Wilmington insurrection—the only coup d'état in American history—and the 1896 Plessy v. Ferguson decision that legalized 'separate but equal.' Lucas and Luna explore how the Gilded Age's industrial expansion and consolidation of wealth were built on a foundation of disenfranchisement, convict leasing, and racial terror. They touch on figures like Ida B. Wells, whose anti-lynching crusade exposed the economic motives behind mob violence, and the 1890 Mississippi Constitution that stripped Black voters of rights. This episode connects the dots between the collapse of Reconstruction, the rise of Jim Crow, and the brutal paradox of the era's gleaming cities and steel bridges. #GildedAge #JimCrow #RobertCharles #PlessyVFerguson #IdaBWells #WilmingtonInsurrection #Lynching #NewOrleans #ConvictLeasing #SeparateButEqual #WhiteSupremacy #Reconstruction #Louisiana #1898 #1900 #History #FexingoHistory #RaceTerror Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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