Transcript Document
CIVIL RIGHTS
MOVEMENT
US HISTORY
Historical Developments
• Dred Scott v. Sanford (1857)
• Involved Scott, a slave who had been brought by his owner to
free states in the North. After his master’s death, he attempted
to sue for freedom.
• Case eventually made it to the Supreme Court, which held in
an opinion by Roger B. Taney that African Americans were not
citizens and therefore had no legal standing to sue.
• Emancipation Proclamation (1863)
• An executive order issued by Lincoln following the Union
Army’s victory in the Battle of Antietam
• Declared all slaves in the Confederacy liberated (did not
apply to slave states under Union control)
• Prompted many slaves to escape the South to gain their
freedom
Historical Developments
• 13th Amendment (1865)
• Abolished slavery and involuntary servitude in the United
States
• Black Codes
• Southerners sought to undermine blacks’ newfound liberty via
legislation
• Mississippi and South Carolina passed the first codes.
• Mississippi’s forced blacks to have signed a labor contract for
the upcoming year by January or face imprisonment while
South Carolina’s mandated that blacks could only work as
farmers or servants unless they paid a fine
Historical Developments
• 14th Amendment (1868)
• Granted citizenship to all persons born or naturalized in the
United States, assured “equal protection of the laws,” and
made it illegal to deprive a person of life, liberty, and property
without due process
• 15th Amendment (1870)
• Prevents state or federal governments from denying suffrage
because of race, color, or previous condition of servitude
Historical Developments
• Jim Crow Laws
• Again, white southerners, who by the late 1870’s had
reestablished political control, attempted to dull the effect
of these laws
• Mandated de jure segregation in all public facilities
reconciled the laws with the 14th Amendment by claiming
the facilities “separate but equal”
• Disenfranchised blacks by instituting poll taxes, literacy tests,
and property requirements whites were often exempt
from these barriers because of grandfather clauses
• Still, many poor whites were disenfranchised as well
• KKK used intimidation and violence to deter blacks from
voting
Historical Developments
• Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)
• Upheld segregation laws as long as facilities were “separate
but equal”
• Lynchings
• Extrajudicial killings carried out by mobs, most frequently
against blacks
• Anti-lynching laws were often discussed in Congress but
failed to pass
Historical Developments
• 19th Amendment (1920)
• Granted women the right to vote
• Brown v. Board (1954)
• Overturned the “separate but equal” holding of the Plessy
case, declaring segregation inherently unequal
• Years would pass before the South fully implemented
desegregation
Brown v. Board
• At the time, nation spent 10x more on white schools than black
schools
• Litigated by the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement
of Colored People), an organization which advocated for civil rights
through the judicial system
• Thurgood Marshall argued the case before the Supreme Court
later became the first African-American Supreme Court justice
• Oliver Brown was the plaintiff in the case; his daughter, Linda, had to
walk 6 blocks to get to the bus stop in order to commute to the
nearest segregated school, 21 blocks away. The closest white school
was only 7 blocks away.
Desegregation & Resistance
• Brown II case (1955) ordered desegregation to be
carried out with “all deliberate speed”
• Many states used the ambiguous language to
delay school integration
• Some state officials promised absolute resistance to
desegregation efforts
• Texas’ governor used the Texas Rangers to stymie
integration
• 1963: Alabama governor's inaugural address
• Within a year, however, more than 500 school
districts had desegregated
Central High School Crisis
• In 1957, the school district in Little Rock, AR began to
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desegregate
Gov. Orval Faubus disagreed with the decision and
ordered the Arkansas National Guard to prevent the
“Little Rock Nine,” the nine African-American students
who had volunteered to attend integrated schools, from
going to class
A federal judge ordered the governor to admit the
students
Initially, Pres. Eisenhower did not support enforcing
states’ compliance with the law
Crisis at Central High caused him to change his mind
Central High School Crisis
• Eisenhower placed the Arkansas National Guard
under federal control and sent a thousand troops to
Little Rock to ensure the students’ safe passage
• Still, the students faced constant harassment,
intimidation, and threats of violence
• Following the end of the school year, the governor
closed Central High School
Civil Rights Act of 1957
• First civil rights law since Reconstruction
• Gave attorney general greater power over school
desegregation
• Main goal of law was to ensure blacks’ voting rights
• Also, allowed blacks to serve on juries
• Lacked enforcement mechanisms, so it was generally
ineffective
• Sen. Strom Thurmond from South Carolina led the longest
one-person filibuster in history (over 24 hours) in a failed
attempt to block passage of the bill
• Lyndon B. Johnson (D-Tex), then the Senate Majority
Leader, was one of the key players in bringing the law to
fruition
Discussion
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Why might someone resist desegregation efforts?
Why do you think racism exists?
Does racism parallel with other “isms?”
Is it possible to eliminate racism? How?
Bus Discrimination
• Blacks were forced to enter at the front of the bus
to pay, exit, then re-board and sit at the rear
• Mistreated by bus drivers who simultaneously
greeted whites respectfully
• Black nurses or maids with white children were
allowed to sit in seats designated for whites
• Many bus routes in the South served a
predominantly black clientele. Regardless, blacks
could not sit in the front of the bus; even if there
were no other seats available, most bus drivers
forced them to stand
Rosa Parks
• Parks was a seamstress and NAACP officer
• Led a life of activism
• On December 1, 1955 she took a seat in the first row of the “colored”
section of the bus
• The bus filled up quickly and Parks, along with 3 other African-Americans,
were asked to give up their seats
• The others assented; Parks, however, refused
• The bus driver called the cops and had Parks arrested She went to jail
briefly but was released on bail
• Parks had had trouble with the same bus driver previously. In 1943, she
refused to exit the bus and re-board in the rear after paying her fare. The
driver forced her to leave.
• http://www.salon.com/2013/02/03/rosa_parks_i_had_been_pushed_
as_far_as_i_could_stand/
Montgomery Bus Boycott
• Following Parks’ protest, African-American leaders decided to boycott
Montgomery buses to protest their mistreatment
• Formed the Montgomery Improvement Association to organize the boycott
MLK, a 26 year-old minister at a local church, was elected to lead the group
• African-Americans took cabs, walked, and organized carpools for
transportation
• Many whites responded with violence: King’s home and several black
churches were bombed
• King pleaded with his followers to avoid violent resistance
• Boycotts were extremely effective, slicing revenues
• 381 day boycott ended with the 1956 Supreme Court decision outlawing
bus segregation
• Demonstrated the effectiveness of nonviolent protest and sparked further
resistance