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The Civil Rights Movement, 19551976

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LBJ and Congress Finally Act. 1964 Civil Rights Act ... LBJ and MLK. Mississippi Freedom Summer, 1964. Voting Rights March from Selma to Montgomery, 1965 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Civil Rights Movement, 19551976


1
The Civil Rights Movement, 1955-1976
2
Discrimination and the NAACP
  • The Early Years of the Civil Rights Movement

3
Racial Discriminations in the 1890s
  • Disfranchisement secret ballot, literacy tests,
    poll taxes, grandfather clauses, white primaries
  • De Jure Segregation
  • Illegal violence

Lynchings from 1860s to 1960s
4
Why Disfranchisement?
  • Black population more than doubled between 1860
    and 1910 4/5s lived in the South and constituted
    35 percent of the population there.
  • The black population was growing faster than the
    white.
  • Fear of poor whites and blacks forming a
    political alliance as in the Populist movement.
  • Fear of black political involvement and black
    rule.

5
Results
  • Literacy tests were upheld by U.S. Supreme Court
    in 1898 in Williams v. Mississippi
  • In Louisiana black voting fell by 99 percent from
    130,344 to 1,342
  • Segregation followed without black resistance
  • Segregation was upheld by U.S. Supreme Court in
    1896 in Plessy v. Ferguson.
  • If African Americans protested, violence resulted

6
Legal Segregation Plessy v. Ferguson, 1896
7
W.E.B. Du Bois and the Establishment of the
NAACP, 1909
8
The First Stage of the Civil Rights Movement
  • Legal Remedies

9
World War II and the U.S. Supreme Court
  • WWII helps a change of attitude over equality of
    rights. Compare Nazism to American racism.
    African Americans seek Double V.
  • Growth of NAACP
  • Creation of Congress of Racial Equality (CORE),
    1942
  • Smith v. Allwright, 1944
  • Truman created Committee on Civil Rights and
    integrated the armed forces in 1948
  • First attacks on segregation aimed at post
    graduate programs

10
Sweatt v. Painter, 1950
Heman Sweatt registering for courses at the
University of Texas law school, Austin, 1950.
11
McLaurin v. Oklahoma State Regents for Higher
Education, 1950
George W. McLaurin attends his first class at the
University of Oklahoma under segregated
conditions. College of Education
12
Public Education 1935-1936
  • Average per capita expenditure in the South for
    education
  • White 37.87
  • Black 13.09
  • National Average 67.88

13
Kenneth and Mamie Phipps Clark and the U.S.
Supreme Court
The Clarks
The Court
14
Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas,1954
The legal team-George E.C. Hayes, left, Thurgood
Marshall, center, and James M. Nabrit, right.
The Brown Family
15
Resistance through White Citizens Councils
  • Southern opponents of racial integration
    organized white citizens councils to obstruct the
    implementation of the 1954 decision by the U.S.
    SUPREME COURT to end school desegregation

16
First Activist Stage
  • 1950s

17
The Montgomery Bus Boycott, 1955-1956
Jo Ann Gibson Robinson and Rosa Parks
18
Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC)
1957
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., founder of the SCLC.
19
Student Activism 1960s
Students from North Carolina A and T College,
Greensboro, February 1, 1960
20
Lunch Counter Sit-ins
Ronald Martin, Robert Patterson, and Mark Martin
stage sit-down strike after being refused service
at a Woolworth lunch counter, Greensboro, N.C.,
1960.
Ministers protest segregation outsidea Woolworths
in New York City
21
F.W. Woolworth Sit-In, Greensboro, North
Carolina, 1960
John Salter, Joan Trumpauer and Anne Moody at a
Sit- in
22
Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC)
1960
John Lewis, Chairman of SNCC, speaking at the
Lincoln Memorial during the March on Washington,
August 28, 1963
Ella Baker
23
CORE and the Freedom Riders, 1961
Anniston, Alabama May 1961
24
Violence to the Surface
  • Riots on College campuses in South (100s injured)
  • Fire-bombing of buses and churches
  • NAACP official Medgar Evers (1963) murdered
    outside his home
  • Freedom Rides 80 injured,
  • 6 murdered

Medgar Evars
25
Voter Registration Drives
  • Begin in 1962 and continue through 1964 after
    passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act

Voter Registration Canvassing, 1964
26
Trouble in Birmingham
Letter from Birmingham Jail, MLK, Jr.,
27
Bombingham, 1963
A bomb that exploded during services at the 16th
Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala., killed
four young girls in September 1963.
28
The March on Washington, D.C., August 28, 1963
29
LBJ and Congress Finally Act
  • 1964 Civil Rights Act
  • Create EEOC
  • (Title VII)

Signing the Civil Rights Act LBJ and MLK
30
Mississippi Freedom Summer, 1964
31
Voting Rights March from Selma to Montgomery, 1965
32
Marchers Crossing Edmund Pettus Bridge -- Voting
Rights March to Montgomery
33
Congress Continues to Act
  • 1965 Voting Rights Act
  • 24th Amendment to the Constitution
  • Outlaws poll taxes

Signing the Voting Rights Act 1965 LBJ and MLK
34
Urban Unrest
35
Black Power
36
MLK Assassination, April 4, 1968
MLK and other civil rights leaders at the
Lorraine Hotel in Memphis, Tennessee, where King
was assassinated.
James Earl Ray, MLKs assassin.
MLK's funeral procession in Atlanta, Georgia,
1968.
37
The Kerner Commission
Pictures from race riots that occurred in major
American cities from 1965-1967, and prompted the
formation of the Kerner Commission in 1967.
38
Mexican Americans and the Fight for Civil Rights
Education Politics Workers
39
La Raza Unida
40
Cesar Chavez and the United Farm Workers Union
41
The Grape Boycott, 1968
42
American Indian Movement
43
Gay Rights Movement The Raid on Stonewall Inn,
Greenwich Village, 1969
44
Environmental Movement Earth Day, 1970
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