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The Great Migration

eAudiobook
Nova Ashford / Christina Foremans

The Great Migration was one of the most significant demographic shifts in American history. Between 1916 and 1970 more than six million African Americans left the rural South and moved to urban areas in the North Midwest and West. This movement not only changed the lives of the people who migrated but also reshaped the cultural political and economic fabric of the United States.

For many African Americans life in the South was marked by racial discrimination economic hardship and constant threats of violence. Jim Crow laws enforced segregation in every aspect of public life from schools and transportation to housing and employment. Black families lived under the constant fear of lynching and racial terror. Economically most African Americans were trapped in sharecropping or low-wage labor with little opportunity for advancement.

At the same time the North offered a vision of hope. Industrial cities like Chicago Detroit Cleveland and New York had booming economies especially during World War I and World War II when labor shortages opened up jobs in steel mills factories and railroads. Though racism still existed in the North it was often less openly violent and African Americans had more chances to organize vote and build communities. This combination of “push” and “pull” factors drove millions to pack up and seek a better future.



  • Published by Cammy Fetchens LLC
  • Fiction/Non-FictionFiction
  • Genre General Fiction
  • Target Audience Adult
  • Released 16th April 2025
  • Duration 01 Hrs. 46 Mins.
  • ISBN 9798318186585