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The Civil Rights Movement

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Title: The Civil Rights Movement


1
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2
The Civil Rights Movement
3
Introduction
  • Challenge to segregation
  • Laws
  • Customs
  • Debates vary on the time period
  • 1955-1965 (Montgomery Bus Boycott to the Voting
    Rights Act)
  • Begin? Has it ended?
  • Other names
  • Black Freedom Movement
  • The Negro Revolution
  • The Second Reconstruction

4
Segregation
  • Attempt by southern whites to separate the races
    in every aspect of life.
  • Jim Crow Laws were created to insure this.
    (named after a minstrel show character who
    embodied multiple negative stereotypes)
  • During Reconstruction, Blacks had made
    advancements and were represented in government.
  • As soon as Reconstruction ended, S. Whites moved
    to regain control, and end any positive steps
    made.

5
  • Between 1890-1910, Southern States passed laws
    making it harder for African Americans to
    participate in government.
  • Literacy tests
  • Property ownership
  • Poll taxes
  • Primaries only open to white voters

6
  • Jim Crow laws established separate facilities for
    whites and colored citizens.
  • Schools, transportation, restaurants, parks, etc.
  • Many facilities were inferior
  • For 75 years--new laws were added, separating the
    races, and pounding in the message that whites
    believed the African Americans to be inferior.

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Early resistance to segregation
  • Frequent protests were made about segregation
  • 1896, Supreme Court ruled that Separate but Equal
    was legal in Plessy v. Ferguson in a case over
    rail car travel.
  • Case would provide constitutional protection for
    segregation laws for 50 years.

9
  • Many organizations began to form
  • 1890 National Afro-American League
  • 1905 Niagara Movement
  • 1909 National Association for the Advancement
    of Colored People (NAACP)
  • 1910 Urban League
  • WEB Dubois, was the leader of the NAACP, which
    became the leader in fighting against
    segregation.
  • Challenged laws through legal action
  • 1935, Charles H. Houston won the first Supreme
    Court battle for the NAACP, giving it strength
    and momentum.
  • 1939, Houstons chief aide, Thurgood Marshall
    became the head of NAACP Legal Defense Fund

10
Early leaders of the NAACP
11
WWI
  • Many African Americans joined to fight for the
    countrybut were segregated, and could not become
    officers
  • Many others migrated to the north, temporarily
    taking vacated jobs, and forming African American
    communities in northern cities.
  • Political pressure was placed on northern
    politicians

12
1930s
  • The depression was particularly hard on African
    AmericansWhite business owners often didnt
    employ them in large African American
    communities.
  • 1st Lady, Eleanor Roosevelt was big influence on
    FDR, and in 1937, he appointed Hugo Black to the
    S.C. (big supporter of equal rights).
  • 1938, courts demand Missouri provide first public
    law school for blacks.

13
WWII
  • 1939-40, editors demand better treatment than WWI
    offered.
  • 1941, A. Philip Randolph organized a march on
    D.C.
  • To stop the march, FDR passed legislation to help
    African Americans
  • Fair Employment Practices Committee
  • Did little, but effect of protest was big.

14
  • Segregation in the armed forces continued
  • Some advancements were made at home.
  • Pay for jobs improved
  • White primaries were outlawed.
  • The experience of fighting racism in Europe would
    form a lasting impression on many when they
    returned home.

15
Last segregated troops
16
School Desegregation
  • Following WWII, Thurgood Marshall and the NAACP
    legal defense fund, tried and won many cases
    against segregation, but their focus was on
    schools.
  • 1950 Sweat v. Painter declared that the
    University of Texas had to integrate its Law
    School.
  • 1954 Issued the landmark ruling in Brown v.
    Board of Education, that stated that segregated
    education was unconstitutional

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Reaction to Brown v. Board of Education
  • South reacts negatively to the Supreme Court
    decision
  • Public Schools were closed
  • African American employees that favored
    integration were fired from their jobs
  • All white private schools were formed
  • Virtually no schools were desegregated in the
    first years, and one dist. In VA close completely.

19
Central High School Little Rock, Arkansas
  • 1957, Governor Orval Faubus defied a Federal
    Court Order to allow nine African American
    Students.
  • President Eisenhower sent the National Guard to
    insure that they were allowed to go to school.
  • Covered by National media, which showed many
    Americans how dramatic the situation was in many
    places.

20
National Guard assists students into Central High
School
21
Thurgood Marshall on the steps of Central High
School with seven of the Central Nine.
22
  • KKK has a rise in membership in south
  • killing of young Emmett Till for flirting w/ a
    white woman, and the subsequent acquittal of
    those involved, highlighted the racism in the
    south to the rest of the nation

23
Montgomery Bus Boycott
  • December 1, 1955, NAACP member Rosa Parks was
    arrested for refusing to give up her seat on a
    Montgomery, AL bus.
  • Almost overnight, a boycott of Montgomery buses
    was organized, and for a year, African Americans
    refused to ride the bus.
  • Nov. 1956, a federal court ordered Montgomery
    buses to be desegregated.

24
Martin Luther King Jr.
Speaking on the virtues of non-violent protest
25
  • MLK Jr. was the president of the organization
    that organized the boycott, making him a national
    figure
  • 1957, he becomes the president of the Southern
    Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC).
  • Wanted to complement the NAACP, through the use
    of non-violent, direct protest to segregation
  • Used demonstrations, marches, and boycotts.
  • White reaction to these protests led to federal
    attention of segregation laws

26
Sit-ins
  • Feb. 1, 1960, 4 N.C AT Univ. students sat at a
    white only lunch counter in a local restaurant.
  • Within weeks, the sit-ins were spread throughout
    the south
  • Displayed the dedication of young African
    Americans to all of America

27
  • Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee
    (SNCC), was supported by MLK Jr., but its real
    leader was Ella Baker
  • Baker favored focusing more on individual
    communities, and less on national change. This
    caused occasional tensions between the groups

28
Freedom Riders
  • In 1961, SNCC members decided to test Supreme Ct.
    decision that forbid segregation on interstate
    bus transportation.
  • The rides began in WA. D.C., and went South.
  • Once the buses reached Alabama, riders were
    beaten, and buses were burned.
  • Violence brought sharp criticism to the South and
    its refusal to protect the riders

29
  • Freedom rides helped to desegregate some bus
    stations, but was most successful in bringing the
    issue to the front of peoples thoughts in the
    United States. Also shows the struggles that the
    young African Americans are willing to go through
    to get their point across.

30
SCLC Campaigns
  • Early 1960s they plan a series of protests
  • Plan to utterly disrupt life
  • Force an end to segregation laws
  • Required 1000s of protesters, willing to go to
    jail if necessary.
  • 1961, protests in Albany, GA failed to make
    changes
  • 1963, Birmingham, Mississippi proved to be a
    different story.

31
Birmingham protests
  • There was a belief that the Birmingham police
    commissioner, Eugene, Bull Connor would meet
    protests with force
  • SCLC invited teenagers and school children to
    join the protests to up the ante
  • Connor responded to protests with police dogs and
    fire hoses to scatter the protesters.
  • Scenes were shown throughout the country.

32
  • In Birmingham, white politicians agreed to end
    some segregation
  • Employers agreed to hire more African Americans
    to jobs and to desegregate some public
    accommodations.
  • Most importantly, national legislation against
    segregation was begun.

33
Desegregating Universities
  • 1962, James Meredith applied to University of
    Mississippi.
  • UM attempted to block his admission
  • After legal battle, he was admitted, but Gov.
    Ross Barnett, refused to obey the court order.
  • JFK sent Federal Marshals to see that he was
    allowed to attend
  • Riots broke out on his first night as marshals
    were attacked2 people were killed, several 100
    were wounded.

34
  • Gov. George Wallace of Alabama attempted to do
    the same.
  • JFK sent full force of US Army to force the
    issue, and prevent violence.
  • Pushed JFK to initiate a commitment to end
    segregation with legislation.
  • 1963, Kennedy initiated Civil Rights legislation
    in Congress.

35
March on Washington
  • In August of 1963, a march was planned to keep
    the pressure on the Kennedy administration.
  • Purposefully, it kept in mind the plan of A.
    Philip Randolph, who was in attendance along with
    members of all the major groups.
  • In front of an audience of 200,000 and the
    Lincoln statue, MLK Jr. delivered his famous, I
    have a dream speech.

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  • After the assassination of Kennedy in 1963, new
    president, Lyndon B. Johnson pushed the
    legislation through as a tribute to JFK.
  • Civil Rights act passed in 1964, despite fierce
    opposition by southern states.
  • It provided the following
  • Desegregation of all public accommodations
  • An end to discrimination in education and
    employment
  • And granted the executive branch of the govt.
    permission to enforce these laws.

38
Voter Registration
  • Also in the early 60s, groups like the SNCC
    worked to get African Americans registered to
    vote.
  • Met high resistance from white supremacist
    groups.
  • Medgar Evers, a leader in the NAACP group in
    Mississippi was shot in front of his home.

39
  • 1965, a march on Montgomery, AL from Selma,
    Alabama was organized and led by MLK Jr.
  • As they left Selma, mounted police tear gassed
    and beat marchers.
  • This caused such commotion to lead LBJ into
    further legislation, ending all voter
    registration rules requiring literacy and other
    voter qualification tests.
  • 3 years after the Voting Rights Act of 1965, over
    a million new African Americans had become
    registered voters.

40
Tougher Tactics
  • After 1965, MLK began to change his tactics,
    looking to improve the economic status of
    impoverished African Americans, nation-wide.
  • He planned another march on D.C. to tackle this
    issue, but was assassinated in 1968.
  • The march took place, but failed to secure any
    more attention from Congress.

41
  • MLKs tactics began to be questioned by many that
    felt that civil disobedience would no longer
    advance their cause.
  • Main opponent was the SNCC, led by Stokely
    Carmichael who popularized the term Black
    Power.
  • Black Power advocates were influenced by Malcolm
    X.

42
  • Malcolm X was a Nation of Islam minister who was
    assassinated in 1965.
  • His teachings emphasized self-sufficiency and
    black separatism.
  • Emphasized black pride and self-assertion.
  • These ideas were condemned by many whites as
    racist and by Civil Rights leaders as undermining
    to a process that had made so much progress.

43
  • Carmichael and his successor in the SNCC, H. Rap
    Brand became symbols of the new radicalism
  • Opposition grew to their views when the Black
    Panther party gained popularity.
  • Advocated violence to further their cause
  • Battled police in Chicago and Oakland.
  • Several leaders were killed or imprisoned for
    battling policemen.

44
Black Power images
45
Bobby Seale, Newtons co-leader of the Black
Panther party.
46
United States Olympic athletes use Black Power
salute instead of putting hands over their hearts
during the playing of the National Anthem during
the award ceremony.
47
End of the Civil Rights Movement
  • Varying opinions
  • End of the march on Montgomery
  • Assassination of MLK Jr.
  • Not over yet
  • Continuing issues from the 70s
  • School bussing
  • Affirmative Action
  • Charter Schools (my own personal belief?)

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