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Trace Virginia’s civil rights struggle from the colonial era through today. What were periods of strides forward and setbacks? Identify a current issue (since 2010) in Virginia that has its roots in that struggle

Essay Instructions:
The research paper must be written in current Turabian format, double spaced in 12 pt. font, have a minimum of 3 scholarly sources (not counting the textbook or Bible), and be a minimum of 5 full pages in length (not counting a title page or the bibliography). The research paper must contain a properly formatted bibliography and in-text citations (footnotes) for all direct quotations and paraphrases from your sources. Any paper lacking both will receive an automatic 25% grade reduction. Only scholarly sources may be used for this paper, as outlined in the course syllabus. This includes the use of books, scholarly articles, and primary sources. Websites that end with .gov, .mil, or .edu are also permitted for use. A scholarly source is one that has been written by a scholar or an expert in a field of study and has been peer-reviewed and/or published. Most websites that show up with a Google search do not fall under this category. A good rule of thumb is if a website ends with .com, .org, or .net, it is a popular history source, and not a scholarly one, even if it is credible. The Jerry Falwell Library gives you access to many excellent scholarly journals and articles that you can use in this class and throughout your college career. The library also has a good question search engine to help you get started with using them. The library's homepage allows you to search for specific topics in their online database as well as their books, so even if you do not HIUS 390 Page 2 of 3 live close enough to Lynchburg to be able to check out a library book, you can still use the library to access all the wonderful material available online. Please take advantage of that! If you are more of a visual learner, the library has also posted some helpful videos on how to determine if a source is scholarly and how to use the library's resources. In the research process, review your sources, pull the ideas out that you find relevant to your topic, and then draw your own conclusions from them. Incorporate your sources into your own findings to lend credibility to your work and demonstrate you have researched the topic to the point where you understand what others have concluded about it and can reasonably draw your own conclusions and contribute new scholarship to the topic. In a short paper like this, avoid using too many direct quotes from your source. A good rule of thumb is to paraphrase the information unless you will change the meaning by doing so, or if the quote is pithy and the phrasing contributes to the meaning. Therefore, be sure to mostly paraphrase the information you pull from your sources, putting their idea completely into your own words. Remember, a paraphrase needs a citation in the same way a direct quote does. For any direct quotes you do use, be sure to integrate them correctly and not just include them as standalone sentences. You are encouraged to look at the instructor’s feedback on the Research Project: Annotated Bibliography Assignment from Module 6 and incorporate it into the final bibliography that is submitted with this paper. There is a grade deduction on the rubric for this assignment for failure to fix formatting things marked on the Research Project: Annotated Bibliography Assignment. When you write your paper, begin with an introduction. In it, include a brief mention of the main points you will cover in your paper. End it with a thesis statement that those main points are going to prove—the main argument in your paper that you want your reader to walk away convinced is true. Your thesis statement should mention Virginia, since your paper is about Virginia history, and it should also include some sort of phrasing that directly ties to the prompt you are responding to (traditional approaches to government, the federalism/anti-federalism debate, or the struggle over civil rights). In the body of your paper, move through each of your main points, going more into depth about them and including properly cited examples that support them. Create new paragraphs for each topic you cover in each point, connecting them to your previous topic with analysis. After you finish explaining a main point, use analysis to show your reader how it supports your main thesis, then move on to the next main point and repeat the process. The concluding paragraph should briefly recount how you used your main points to prove the thesis of the paper. It should not introduce any new points. It is your last chance to reiterate your main ideas—make the most of it! When you write for academic assignments, be sure to follow the best practices for formal writing. Those include:  Always write in formal language. Avoid colloquialisms and contractions.  Always write in the third person (he, she, it...), never first person (I, we, me...). HIUS 390 Page 3 of 3  Avoid run-on sentences and sentence fragments. Make sure you can identify the subject and verb in every sentence.  When writing about historical things, stay in the past tense.  Only use apostrophes to make nouns possessive, never plural. Review the Research Project: Research Paper Grading Rubric before submitting your research paper and verify it meets the expectations for this assignment. Note: Your assignment will be checked for originality via the Turnitin plagiarism tool.
Essay Sample Content Preview:
Trace Virginia’s civil rights struggle from the colonial era through today. What were periods of strides forward and setbacks? Identify a current issue (since 2010) in Virginia that has its roots in that struggle Name: Institutional affiliation: Course: Date: Introduction The Civil Rights movement, a struggle for justice and equality for African Americans, is a crucial historical moment in the US that began as early as 1607 – and continues to this very day. When the English first arrived in 1607 in Virginia, settlements started emerging along the James River, between the years 1607 to 1613 (Fausz, 1971). When Francis Eppes was granted a 1700-acre piece of land between Bailey Creek and Clawson’s Creek, he started the first plantation called Appomattox. With the emergence of plantations, the first twenty Africans arrived in Virginia in 1619. Through 1619 to late 1661 Africans were shipped into Virginia with official enslavement being reported in 1661. Until the Civil War that lasted between 1861 to 1865 several slave laws were passed in Virginia including the Law of the Womb of 1662, the killing of slaves as not a crime in 1669, anti-slave insurrection of 1680, among others (Monticello.Org., 2024). Virginia was and continues to be a battleground for justice and equality to this day. Colonial Era, Civil war, and Reconstruction The arrival of the English in 1609 saw the emergence of 13 colonies in America. Across the 13 colonies, slaves were used to cultivate plantations. Before 1660 only a small percentage of Virginia planters held slaves, but by the end of 1675 slaves had already replaced over 90% of indentured servants (Monticello.Org. 2024). With vast land to till and freely available labor, the Southern part prospered, and tobacco plantation became the major economic activity. More so, the Virginia slave codes of 1705 codified and institutionalized slavery, further limiting their human rights. According to Tomlins (2001), Virginia became a center for slavery and between 1790 to 1860 over 1 million enslaved Africans both men and women were sold from the upper south (Virginia) to the lower South With the emergence of civil war, which was largely fought due to the moral issue of slavery, the growing number of African Americans in Virginia started a struggle for meaningful freedom. Immediately after the Civil War, white leaders, especially in 1865 enacted a series of laws famously known as “black codes”. These laws were designed to ensure a continued availability of black labor as many were imprisoned due to misdemeanors and other petty felonies. One major stride to equality among Africans was the Virginia Declaration of rights in 1776 during the Revolutionary War whereby equity and natural rights were proclaimed (Stern, 2021). Even with the law, slavery persisted, with Virginia becoming the largest slaveholder as compared to other states. Every effort to abolish slavery, especially by Africans was met with harsh resistance from ...
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