Transcript Document

Chapter 18 Section 2
February 1st, 1960
• On February 1st, 1960,
four college students
(Joseph McNeil, Franklin
McCain, David Richmond,
and Ezell Blair, Jr.), walked
into an F.W. Woolworth
Company in Greensboro,
North Carolina and staged
a sit-in at the lunch
counter.
• This event helped
touched off a new mass
movement for civil rights.
More Sit-ins
• By 1961 sit-ins were
held in more than 100
cities.
• Many African American
college students joined
the sit-in movement.
Students like Jesse
Jackson thought sit-ins
were a way to take
things into their own
hands.
Fearful of what the youth might do
• At first, the leaders of the NAACP and the SCLC
were concerned about the sit-ins.
• They feared that the students might fight back
if attacked.
• The students remained peaceful, despite
being punched, kicked, and beaten.
Ella Baker
• As the sit-ins spread,
student leaders realized
that they needed to
create an organization of
their own.
• Ella Baker, the executive
director of the SCLC,
organized a convention at
Shaw University and
urged students to
establish the Student
Nonviolent Coordinating
Committee (SNCC).
SNCC
• The Student Nonviolent
Coordinating
Committee (SNCC) was
instrumental in
desegregating public
places in many
communities.
• Members of SNCC
began working in the
rural areas of the Deep
South.
Robert Moses
• Robert Moses, a SNCC
volunteer from New
York began the Voter
Education Project that
helped rural African
Americans register to
vote.
Freedom Riders
• In 1961 civil rights volunteers
began traveling to the South.
• They hoped to draw
attention to the South’s
segregation of bus terminals.
• These teams of African
Americans and whites who
traveled into the South in
1961 were known as
Freedom Riders.
• White mobs often attacked
the Freedom Riders when
they arrived in Southern
cities.
JFK’s view on civil rights
• President John F. Kennedy
decided he had to do
something to stop the
violence.
• At first Kennedy seemed as
cautious as Eisenhower on
civil rights.
• Kennedy needed the
support of Southern
senators to get his
legislation passed.
• He did not want to
challenge these senators on
the subject of civil rights.
JFK’s move on civil rights
• However, Kennedy did
name about 40 African
Americans to high-level
government jobs.
• JFK also supported the
civil rights movement by
allowing the Justice
Department, which was
run by his brother Robert
Kennedy, to file lawsuits
to help African Americans
register to vote.
ICC
• Additionally, JFK
ordered the Interstate
Commerce Commission
(ICC) to tighten
regulations against
segregated bus
terminals.
University of Mississippi
• Meanwhile, activists
worked to integrate
public schools.
• African American James
Meredith applied to the
University of Mississippi
but was denied
admittance by the
governor.
• President Kennedy
ordered army troops to
protect Meredith.
Birmingham, Alabama
• To force Kennedy to
support civil rights,
Martin Luther King, Jr.,
ordered demonstrations
in Birmingham, Alabama.
• The demonstrations
turned violent and were
broadcast on national
television.
• Kennedy then prepared a
new civil rights bill.
University of Alabama
• In June 1963, Alabama
governor George Wallace
stood in front of the
University of Alabama’s
admissions office.
• He was trying to stop two
African Americans from
enrolling.
• Federal marshals ordered
him to move.
• President Kennedy used
this event to present his
civil rights bill.
I Have a Dream
• To build public support for
JFK’s civil rights bill, Martin
Luther King, Jr., took part in
a large march in
Washington, D.C.
• On August 28, 1963, more
than 200,000
demonstrators gathered
peacefully at the nation’s
capital. Dr. King delivered
his powerful “I Have a
Dream” speech. The march
built support for Kennedy’s
civil rights bill.
Two events delayed the passage of the Civil Rights Act of
1964; the first was JFK’s assassination in November 1963.
• When Lyndon Johnson
became president, he felt it
was his responsibilities to
fulfill JFK’s legacy by having
the civil rights bill pass and
become law.
• Subsequently, the civil rights
bill passed the House of
Representatives in February
1964.
• The second event that delayed
the passage of the Civil Rights
Act of 1964 occurred in the
U.S. Senate.
• Southern Democrats
participated in a filibuster,
meaning that they kept
speaking and refused to allow
cloture, or ending debate.
• The bill finally passed and it
was the largest civil rights law
Congress had ever enacted.
• It gave the federal government
broad power to prevent racial
discrimination.
Elements of the Civil Rights Act of 1964
• Key elements of the Civil Rights Act of 1964
included:
– Making segregation illegal
– Gave citizens equal access to facilities
– Gave the attorney general more power to enforce
school desegregation
– Established the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission (EEOC).
EEOC
• The EEOC is an agency
created to end
discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex,
or national origin in
employment and to
promote programs to
make equal
employment
opportunity a reality.
Alabama March
• To keep the pressure on
the president and
Congress to act on
voting rights, Dr. King
and others organized an
Alabama march from
Selma to Montgomery.
It began on March 7,
1965.
Alabama March
• At one point in the march,
state troopers and
deputized citizens rushed
the demonstrators.
• The attack left more than 70
African Americans
hospitalized.
• The nation was shocked at
the brutality it saw on
television. President
Johnson was furious.
• He went before Congress to
present a new voting rights
law.
Voting Rights Act of 1965
• In August 1965, Congress
passed the Voting Rights Act
of 1965.
• It ordered federal examiners
to register qualified voters.
• It ended discriminatory
practices such as literacy
tests.
• The civil rights movement
had achieved its two goals.
• Segregation had been
outlawed, and laws were in
place to protect voting
rights.
New Focus…
• The focus of the civil rights movement after
passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 was
how African Americans could achieve full
social and economic equality.