The civil rights movement
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Transcript The civil rights movement
Chapter 28
THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT
WHAT PAVED THE WAY?
1947 Jackie Robinson becomes the first
African American to play in Major League
Baseball
What team?
This paved the way for others to follow in his
footsteps
“ALL ARE CREATED EQUAL” OR ARE THEY?
After WW II US citizens started to recognize that
there needed to be a push for civil rights
Things that led to this:
African
American Migration- after Civil War to the
North= prominent jobs, influence
The New Deal- enough said
WW II- African Americans started to work and
therefore voted and more than that the Holocaust
opened our eyes
CONTINUED……
Rise
of NAACP- National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People, worked hard to
challenge segregation laws
Specifically
Plessy vs. Ferguson, which stated that it was
lawful to have separate but equal public facilities
Thurgood Marshall led the NAACP and lawyer Oliver Hill
were able to get $50 million in higher pay and better
education
THE GREATEST FIGHT OF ALL!
Brown vs. Board of Education of Topeka,
Kansas historic Supreme Court case
Result: Unanimous decision that “separate but
equal” was unconstitutional and could not be
applied to education and a movement to
desegregate began
DO ALL FOLLOW SUIT?
Mixed reaction
African Americans rejoiced, white Americans
even if they did not agree accepted the ruling
President Eisenhower who privately disagreed,
“The Supreme Court has spoken and I am
sworn to uphold the constitutional process in
this country, and I am trying.” “I will obey.”
I WILL NOT ACCEPT EQUALITY!!!!!!!
Not everyone did obey!
Southern whites, especially in the deep south
reacted with resistance
Georgia governor, Talmadge made it clear that
he would not tolerate the mixing of races in
public schools
KKK becomes more active threatening those
that accepted the court ruling
Was this the first time for the KKK?
SOUTHERN MANIFESTO
90 Congressmen came together to express
their opposition for the court
Southern Manifesto stated that the Supreme
Court overstepped their boundaries
Violated states rights
Refused to desegregate because of chaos and
violence
END RESULT…… VIOLENCE AND RESISTANCE
Rosa Parks sat in the colored section of the
bus in Alabama
What’s the problem?
African Americans were “expected” to give up
their seats if whites did not have one
She refused to get up and at the next stop was
arrested!
THE BOYCOTT
The plan called for all African Americans to
boycott public transportation until the bus
company changed their policy
Martin Luther King, Baptist minister only 26,
became the spokesperson for the movement
“there
comes a time when people get tired….tired
of being segregated and humiliated, tired of being
kicked about by the brutal feet of oppression. We
have no alternative but to protest.”
“I HAVE A DREAM”
WAS THE BOYCOTT SUCCESSFUL?
First day rush hour the streets were packed
with people walking to and from work!
Some walked as much as 12 miles
“Determination of individuals willing to suffer
and sacrifice fro their freedom and dignity”
Over the next year 50,000 African Americans
boycotted the bus and yet
HOPE AT LAST
Supreme Court in 1956 ruled that segregation
on bus, like school segregation was
unconstitutional
Gave hope to African Americans and other
minorities
ISSUE IN LITTLE ROCK
Governor Faubus of Arkansas said he could not
keep order if he allowed integration(1957)
Defied the Supreme Court ruling and sent the
National Guard at Central High School in Little
Rock
Angry mobs of people also grouped and
prevented the entry of blacks
REMEMBRANCE OF THE DAY
15 year old Elizabeth Eckford remembered the
day:
“The Arkansas National Guard glared at me with a
mean look and I was very frightened and I don’t know
what to do. I turned around and the crowd came
toward me yelling. They moved closer and closer.
Somebody started yelling, “Lynch her! Lynch her!” I
tried to see a friendly face in the mob-someone who
maybe would help. I looked into the face of an old
women and it seemed a kind face, but when I looked
at her again, she spat at me.”
WHAT HAPPENED?
Even though Eisenhower didn’t agree with Civil
Rights he put the National Guard under his
order to protect the nine black students at the
school
Paved the way for other minorities such as
Latin Americans, Mexican Americans and
Native Americans
Section 2
LEADERS AND STRATEGIES
GRASS ROOTS BEGIN
The Civil Rights movement began with ordinary
citizens in the 50’s and 60’s
Paved the way for new organizations:
1.
NAACP, W.E.B. Du Bois was the founder, and first
African American received a doctoral
2. National Urban League, dealt with helping
people who moved from the South to have fair
treatment, housing and jobs
CONTINUED
3.
CORE, Congress of Racial Equality, wanted
change but peacefully and without violence
4. SCLC, Southern Christian Leadership Conference
advocated for nonviolent protests
CIVIL RIGHTS MOVES FORWARD
Martin Luther followed the ideas of Gandhi,
which pushed for passivism, the idea that the
oppressed should never fight back with force
SNCC, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating
Committee (snick), shifted church leaders to
young activists, sought for immediate change
Robert
Moses was the most influential leader of the
SNCC, he was humble, quiet and ordinary, very
unlike Martin Luther King
Section 3
THE STRUGGLE INTENSIFIES, IT DOESN’T GET
ANY EASIER!!!!!
LET’S HAVE A BREAK ALREADY!!
Implemented sit-ins, many organizations like
CORE went to segregated places and just sat
down (Jack Spratt Coffee House)
Many were beaten or arrested (cigarettes down
shirt)
Arrest was considered a badge of honor by
Martin Luther
LET FREEDOM………….. RIDE?????
Freedom Rides- wanted to test whether the
south would obey the Supreme Court ruling
First one left Washington and started to the
South
Only a few encounters at first but when they got
to Alabama they slashed their tires. Followed
them and threw a fire bomb into the bus
http://www.crmvet.org/images/imgcoll.htm
WHAT IS GOING ON HERE????
People were astonished by how sane and
relatively sensible people were reacting to
where people sat on the bus
The first freedom ride died out in Mississippi
Kennedy steps into office with all this
DEFECATION HITS THE ROTATING OSCILLATOR
James Meredith wants to go to “Ole Miss” an
all white college
He is rejected and he goes to the Supreme
Court and they uphold his claim
Governor said he could not enroll even thought
the Supreme Court said yes
He physically stands in front of the admissions
building
KENNEDY ACTS RELUCTANTLY
Kennedy send in federal marshals to escort
him into the school
Violence erupted, people destroyed cars etc.
Tear gas was used and people died
Meredith reports it wasn’t all bad, “I was here
for education, not for trouble”
TROUBLE IN BIRMINGHAM
Reverend Shuttlesworth asked Martin Luther to
come and help desegregate
Martin Luther King was arrested for “parading”
without a permit
Young people joined the march
They were stopped with fire hoses that could
wash the bark off a tree and their legs were
attacked by dogs, when they fell they were
beaten by police
ULTIMATE SUCCESS
Photographers videotaped and allowed the
nation to watch the violence
Ultimately they will win Birmingham and
desegregate the state
http://www.pbs.org/wnet/historyofus/web14/s
egment6.html
Section 4
THE POLITICAL RESPONSE
KENNEDY MAKES THE RIGHT MOVE!
Months before the election Kennedy gets
bonus points and gains respect
Martin
Luther King had been jailed in Georgia and
forced in a hard labor camp
Family feared for his life
Kennedy pulled some strings and got him out
Many African Americans will switch their vote from
Nixon to Kennedy
Crucial in Kennedy’s slim margin victory!
DUH…I HAVE NO IDEA WHAT YOU ARE TALKING
ABOUT!!!
When Kennedy gets in office he tries to stand a
middle ground
He appoints African Americans to positions
(Thurgood Marshal) but also segregationists
Tried to keep people (democratic southern
senators) from getting angry
AGAIN THE DEFECATION HITS THE ROTATING
OSCILLATOR!
While speaking with Nikita Khrushchev he
realizes that around the world people are
watching the brutality in the south!!
His speech:
“We
preach freedom around the world, and we
mean it, and we cherish our freedom, here at
home, but are we to say to the world, and much
more importantly, to each other that this is the land
of the free except for Negroes?.... The time has
come for this nation to fulfill its promise!”
KENNEDY’S SUPPORT CAUSES VIOLENCE
Hours later Medgar Evers from the NAACP was
gunned down in front of his home
His gunman was set free
Kennedy will try to pass a much stronger bill for
desegregation, public education, federal
funding etc.
Southern congressmen will try to keep it off the
floor
THE MARCH ON WASHINGTON
200,000 people will come from all over to call
for “jobs and freedom” led by A. Philip
Randolph
Celebrities like, Jackie Robinson, Bon Dylan,
Sammy Davis Junior, James Baldwin will give
their support
http://blip.tv/file/4545/
THE MARCH CONTINUED
The march was peaceful and this is where
Martin Luther will give his famous speech
Even with this impressive speech the bill still
remained stalled
http://afroamhistory.about.com/od/marchonw
ashington/ig/March-on-WashingtonPhotos/Aerial-View-of-Crowd.htm
THE DEATH OF KENNEDY
Three months after the march Kennedy was
assassinated and his civil rights bill was not
much closer to passage
Lyndon Johnson will become the new president
and pass the bill along
As a Congressman he voted against Civil Rights
but as president was dedicated to uphold the
wishes of Kennedy
THE PUSH WE NEEDED
Johnson fulfilled the promise to push for civil
rights and aggressively
Opponents of the bill started a filibuster, a
debate that goes on day and night to prevent
votes and an ultimate decision
Utilized cloture, a three fifths vote to limit
debate and get a vote
CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1964
Impacted many areas such as jobs, school, and
voting
Gave the government the power to act more
vigorously
PARTS OF THE LAW
Title I banned the use of different voter
registration standards
Title II prohibited discrimination in ALL public
accommodations
Title VI withheld public funding from
organizations that practiced discrimination
Title VII banned discrimination based on sex,
race, religion, or national origin by employers
Created
the EEOC, Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission to investigate