Transcript Document

Advancing Civil Rights
Primary Source Activity
Wednesday, July 17
Lesson Focus:
How did individuals help to
advance the cause of civil
rights in the decades just
before before the Civil Rights
Movement of the 1950s and
1960s?
Telling a Story Through Primary Sources
Before examining this question, we’ll start by
investigating some primary sources related to the
story of one everyday American who became an
extraordinary American and whose actions helped
to launch the Civil Rights Movement.
Working with a partner, examine the sources
provided to you and answer the accompanying
questions.
Rosa Parks’ Arrest Record
Supporting Records & Booking Photo
Montgomery Bus Boycott
Text of flyer circulated by Montgomery Improvement Association following settlement
of boycott:
December 19, 1956
Integrated Bus Suggestions
This is a historic week because segregation on buses has now been declared
unconstitutional. Within a few days the Supreme Court Mandate will reach Montgomery
and you will be re-boarding integrated buses. This places upon us all a tremendous
responsibility of maintaining, in face of what could be some unpleasantness, a calm and
loving dignity befitting good citizens and members of our Race. If there is violence in
word or deed it must not be our people who commit it.
For your help and convenience the following suggestions are made. Will you read, study
and memorize them so that our non-violent determination may not be endangered. First,
some general suggestions:
•1. Not all white people are opposed to integrated buses. Accept goodwill on the part of
many.
•2. The whole bus is now for the use of all people. Take a vacant seat.
•3. Pray for guidance and commit yourself to complete non-violence in word and action as
you enter the bus.
•4. Demonstrate the calm dignity of our Montgomery people in your actions…
What story do the sources tell us?
• How do all of the sources connect?
• What do they tell us about Rosa Parks
and her role in advancing the cause of
civil rights in the 1950s?
Individual Action Leads to
Significant Reaction and Reform
Rosa Parks’ individual
protest against
segregation sparked the
Montgomery Bus Boycott,
which (as the flyer from
the Montgomery
Improvement Association
notes) succeeded in
bringing about a Supreme
Court decision that ruled
segregation on public bus
transportation as
unconstitutional.
Montgomery citizens walk to work rather than ride
public buses as part of the Montgomery Bus Boycott,
1955-56
Advancing the Cause of Civil Rights
Before the Mid-1950s
Just as Rosa Parks, an “ordinary” American, made
a vital contribution to advancing civil rights and
breaking down racial barriers, the five Americans
we will now study made their own contributions
to that cause in the two decades prior to 1955.
These five individuals possessed extraordinary
talents or served in leadership positions that
enabled them to play a significant role in bringing
about positive change.
Primary Source Investigation
Working with your team, examine the primary
sources provided to you and, using the guiding
questions provided, try to identify:
*Who is the extraordinary American connected
with the sources?
*What made them extraordinary?
*What story do the sources reveal to us?
*How did the individual help to advance the
cause of civil rights and equality?
Marian Anderson
Jesse Owens
A. Philip Randolph
Benjamin O. Davis, Sr.
Jackie Robinson
Assessment Options
• Jigsaw: Students work together in a group to examine
their historic figure and then split off into a group with
students from other groups to share their stories.
• Press Conference: One student from each group plays the
role of their group’s historic figure in a press conference
where other students play the role of journalists asking
questions.
• Essay: Students can write an essay from the perspective
of their historic figure, describing the challenges they
faced and how they overcame them as well as their
significance to American society today.
• Storyboard: Students can produce a “comic strip” style
account of their historic figure’s story.
Rosa Parks Links:
• Rosa Parks photograph and arrest record:
http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/brown/brown-aftermath.html
http://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/rosaparks/#documents
• Montgomery Improvement Association flyer,
December 19, 1956:
http://www.alabamamoments.state.al.us/sec55ps.html
Marian Anderson Links
• Letter from Eleanor Roosevelt to the Daughters
of the American Revolution (DAR), February 26,
1939: http://www.archives.gov/exhibits/american_originals/eleanor.html
• Photo of Marian Anderson on the steps of the
Lincoln Memorial, April 9, 1938:
http://myloc.gov/Exhibitions/lincoln/vignettes/MemorializingLincoln/ExhibitO
bjects/MarianAndersonSings.aspx
• Walter White Letter to Eleanor Roosevelt, April
12, 1939:
http://myloc.gov/Exhibitions/naacp/greatdepression/ExhibitObjects/WalterW
hitetoEleanorRoosevelt.aspx
Jesse Owens Links
• Unsent Letter from Walter White to Jesse
Owens, December 4, 1935:
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/aaohtml/exhibit/aopart8b.html
• Photo of Owens Competing in the 200 Meters
at the Berlin Olympics, 1936:
http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2004672056/
• Photo of Medal Ceremony in Berlin, 1936:
http://www.ecopolis.org/jesse-owens-did-not-get-a-handshake-1936summer-olympics/
A. Philip Randolph Links
• “Why Should We March?” flyer, c. 1943:
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/aaohtml/exhibit/aopart8.html
• Photo of A. Philip Randolph with Eleanor
Roosevelt, 1940:
http://www.gwu.edu/~erpapers/workers/articles/labback2.htm
• Executive Order 8802, June 25, 1941:
http://www.ourdocuments.gov/doc.php?flash=true&doc=72
Benjamin O. Davis, Sr. Links
• Davis Letter and Photo, obtained from
“Defending the Long Road to Freedom”
exhibit, Army Heritage Center Foundation:
https://www.armyheritage.org/component/content/article/50information/soldier-stories/129-defending-the-long-road-to-freedom
• Executive Order 9981, July 26, 1948:
http://www.trumanlibrary.org/9981.htm
Jackie Robinson Links
• Jackie Robinson comic book cover, 1951:
http://memory.loc.gov/cgibin/query/r?ammem/bbpix:@field(NUMBER+@band(cph+3g06144))
• Jackie Robinson comic book, 1950:
http://blog.americanhistory.si.edu/osaycanyousee/2013/06/jackie-robinsoncomic-book-hero42.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed
%3A+OSayCanYouSee+%28O+Say+Can+You+See%3F+National+Museum+of+American+History+Blog%29
• Jackie Robinson letter to President Eisenhower, May 13,
1958:
http://www.archives.gov/exhibits/featured_documents/jackie_robinson_lette
r/