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The Dixiecrat Revolt

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Title: The Dixiecrat Revolt


1
The Dixiecrat Revolt
2
After WWII
  • Black veterans came home determined to end
    segregation
  • White veterans came home with doubts about
    continuing segregation but most wanted to
    preserve it
  • 1946 Bilbo ran for re-election to the U.S.
    Senate, he told white Mississippians to visit
    blacks the night before the election to
    persuade them not to vote
  • He won the election but the Senate denied him his
    seat for openly inciting violence

3
  • 1947 voters elected 78 new members to the state
    house of representatives
  • Many of the new members were veterans who wanted
    to reorganize the government, improve education,
    and help working people
  • Passed workers compensation law
  • 1946 Fielding Wright becomes governor, he
    focused the legislatures attention to preserving
    segregation

4
Withdrawing from the National Party
  • Wright vowed to attend the 1948 Democratic
    National Convention
  • Would withdraw from it if the party had a
    platform that contained a civil rights article
  • Civil Rights basic rights of citizens, such as
    free speech, the right to vote, privacy, and
    property ownership
  • The convention ignored Mississippis request to
    preserve segregation and adopted a civil rights
    article
  • Southern Democrats left the party and created the
    States Rights party, known as the Dixiecrats
  • Wanted to preserve segregation

5
The Dixiecrats Walk out of the Democratic
National Nominating Convention
6
Rebirth of the Republican Party
  • Many people left the Democratic Party to support
    the Republican party
  • In the 1952 presidential election, the national
    Democratic Party was in favor of integration.
  • Integration was combining the separate
    facilities of the south.
  • A group calling themselves Democrats for
    Eisenhower chose to support the Republican Party
    in the election.
  • This, along with the Dixiecrats, showed that the
    Solid South was breaking up.
  • Whites started to take control of the Republican
    Party because the Democratic party started to
    supporting integration

7
Social Change and The Civil Rights Movement
8
Socially
  • White Mississippians became the majority of the
    population
  • The split between the sharecropper and the
    planter disappeared and the middle class grew
  • Hugh White, in 1951, was elected governor and his
    focus was school integration
  • Integration the process of bringing different
    groups (races) into society as equals

9
Separate but Equal
  • 1896- the US Supreme Court issued a ruling in the
    Plessy vs. Ferguson case that established
    separate but equal
  • Allowed states to pass laws to segregate public
    facilities for blacks and whites

10
Brown vs. Board of Education
  • 1954-Supreme Court ruled in Brown vs. Board
    Education that the separate but equal was
    unconstitutional
  • The Supreme Court decided that segregated
    facilities were automatically unequal and
    therefore unconstitutional.
  • The Supreme Court ordered that all segregated
    public schools be integrated.
  • 1955- Brown II schools must be integrated with
    all deliberate speed

11
  • 1954-Delta planter had founded the White
    Citizens Council
  • Distributed materials supporting segregation
  • organized political pressure to support
    segregation
  • made radio and television broadcasts in support
    of segregation
  • 1955- J.P. Coleman was governor of MS and
    promised to keep schools segregated

12
The Death of Emmett Till
  • A. August 1955 14 year old Chicago boy visited
    relatives near Money, MS
  • b. Supposedly whistled and called the wife of a
    local (white) store owner Baby.
  • c. Till was taken a few nights later by the store
    owner and his brother-in-law.

13
  • d. Body of Till was found three days later in the
    Tallahatchie River corpse unrecognizable
  • e. Mother of Till insisted on an open casket
    funeral so the entire world could see what
    happened
  • f. Trial failed to convict the men accused of the
    crime even with eye witnesses
  • g. Huge impact on ALL African-Americans
    North/South

14
Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC)
  • a. Organized in 1957 by Martin Luther King, Jr.
  • b. Churches were the largest and best-organized
    black institutions allowed to be successful in
    the segregated society.
  • c. This movement thus aimed to mobilize the vast
    power of the black churches on behalf of civil
    rights.

15
Sovereignty Commission
  • Governor Coleman did everything he could to
    prevent integration legally. He didnt believe
    he could ignore an order of the U.S. Supreme
    Court
  • He went along with the legislature and
    established the Sovereignty Commission
  • Designed to identify, watch, and defeat the
    enemies of segregation
  • 1959-Coleman loss to Ross Barnett who was backed
    by the Citizens Council
  • Barnett made the CC apart of the state government

16
Crisis at Ole Miss
  • Federal Court ordered integration of Ole Miss by
    admitting James Meredith in 1962.
  • Gov. Ross Barnett blocked the entrance of the
    school and Kennedy sent Federal Marshals to
    enforce the integration.
  • Mob occurred and shot
  • out windows, streetlights
  • and car tires.
  • 2 killed and 375 injured.

17
Ross Barnett
  • Ross Barnett was the governor of MS at the time
    Meredith attempted to enroll - he pledge not to
    allow Meredith to enroll.
  • The weekend before Meredith was to enroll,
    Barnett gave a speech at the halftime of the Ole
    Miss football game, telling the students to
    encourage Meredith not to enroll.
  • His speech led to a riot on the campus of Ole
    Miss.
  • JFK had to call in the U.S. Army to stop the
    violence and insure that Meredith was enrolled.

18
Medgar Evers
  • Was the head of the Mississippi NAACP (National
    Association of the Advancement of Colored People)
  • June 1963- Byron de la Beckwith murdered Evers on
    the carport of his home
  • Beckwith went to trial in 1964
  • Twice the trial ended in a hung jury (could not
    reach a verdict)
  • In 1994, Beckwith was retried a third time and
    convicted of murder of Medgar Evers

19
Mississippi Freedom Summer
  • Throughout the 1960s, individuals worked to end
    segregation and to register black Mississippians
    to vote
  • The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee
    (SNCC) concentrated on voter registration-
    Traveled to the south to help register black
    voters
  • Organized Sit-ins that were used to desegregate
    facilities
  • Where people enter a segregated facility and
    refuse to leave

20
(No Transcript)
21
The Freedom Riders
They will be met with violence many were
arrested, the places they stay will be
fire-bombed and some will be killed.
22
Mississippi Freedom Summer 1964
  • Summer of 1964
  • 800 College students from all over the US met in
    Ohio to be trained for voter registration in the
    South by SNCC.
  • while working to register African Americans to
    vote, 3 Civil Rights workers were murdered in
    Neshoba County

23
Neshoba County
  • In Neshoba County, three civil rights workers
    will be kidnapped and murdered - their bodies
    will eventually be discovered in a pond dam by
    the FBI.
  • The FBI will arrest 19 men, which included
    several police officers, but will not try them
    for murder in the state courts of MS.
  • Instead, they will try 18 of them in federal
    court for violating the civil rights of the three
    men.
  • Seven of the men will be found guilty the
    longest prison term will be 10 years (none served
    more than six).
  • Edgar Ray Killen, considered the mastermind of
    the plan, would be convicted of manslaughter in
    2005.

24
The Site of the Bodies
25
  • On June 21, 1964, three young civil rights
    workers a 21-year-old black Mississippian James
    Chaney and two white New Yorkers Andrew Goodman,
    20, and Michael Schwerner, 24 were murdered
  • June 21, 2005 Edgar Ray Killen, the supposed
    mastermind of the crime, was sentenced to 60
    years in jail for the crimes.

26
White Mississippians Opposed to the Violence
  • Most white Mississippians didnt support the
    violence that was occurring in MS during this
    time but anyone that spoke out against
    segregation was in danger of being ostracized
    shut out of white society or subjected to
    violence themselves.
  • Churches dismissed pastors who preached
    moderation.
  • James Silver, a history professor at Ole Miss,
    was run out of the state for publishing The
    Closed Society a book about the integration
    crisis at Ole Miss and for eating lunch with
    James Meredith in the university cafeteria.

27
Fannie Lou Hamer
  • Fannie Lou Hamer was the 20th child of a
    sharecropper who grew up on a plantation in the
    Delta.
  • She became a civil rights worker in MS and was
    arrested and beaten in Winona, MS.
  • She began traveling around the country telling
    her story, which had a big influence on public
    opinion.

28
The Freedom Democratic Party
  • In 1964, the Freedom Democratic Party, an
    integrated group of Mississippians, challenged
    the regular Democratic Party for their seats at
    the Democratic national nominating convention.
  • Fannie Lou Hamer was allowed to address the
    convention and she claimed the FDR was the true
    Democratic Party of MS because it represented all
    Mississippians.
  • The FDR didnt get the seats at the convention
    but Hamers speech (on television) had a huge
    impact on public opinion.

29
Civil Rights Act of 1964
  • Made it unlawful for anyone to discriminate on
    the basis of race if they served the public
  • Forced MS businessmen to accept black customers
  • Mississippi business groups urged the public to
    obey the law
  • If they wanted to make money they could not
    discriminate

30
Voting Rights Act
  • 1965
  • Sent federal registrars into Mississippi and
    other states to register black voters
  • Abolished the literacy tests!

School Integration
  • Mississippi schools integrated peacefully in the
    1970s
  • Segregated private schools developed for those
    whites unwilling to accept integration
  • Most whites remained in public schools

31
Black Political Power
  • Because of the Voting Rights Act of 1964, 21
    black men were elected to public office in 1964.
  • Robert Clark, the grandson of a slave, became
    the first black man elected to the state
    legislature since Reconstruction.
  • In 1971 Charles Evers, Medgar Evers brother, ran
    for governor as an independent.
  • In 1986, Mike Espy was elected to the U.S. House
    of Representatives, the first black man elected
    to the federal government from MS since
    Reconstruction.
  • Espy was eventually chosen by President Bill
    Clinton to be the Secretary of Agriculture.
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