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Chapter 21
Civil Rights
Section 1
•Taking on Segregation
The Segregation System
Segregation was made constitutional by the case of Plessy v. Ferguson in 1896 stating the case of “Separate but Equal” meaning that segregation was legal as long as equal service was given to all parties.
Many blacks tried to escape Southern racism by fleeing north in the early 20th century only to discover it was the same everywhere
The Segregation System
World War II in many ways set the tone for the Civil Rights movement in 3 ways
The demand for soldiers created a shortage of white laborers in jobs back home in which blacks filled
Nearly 1 million blacks served in the military and due to this the military had to do away with their discriminatory policies
During the war Civil Rights activists actively fought for voting rights for blacks and challenged Jim Crow laws which in turn forced FDR to prohibit discrimination from any agencies and all companies involved in war activities
Challenging Segregation in Court
The desegregation campaign was led mostly by the NAACPCharles Hamilton Houston was a brilliant man who was a Howard
University law professor helped lead the NAACP He Houston had several of his law students train under Thurgood
Marshall in 1938 and over the next 23 years Marshall and his NAACP lawyers that came from Houston would win 29 out of 32 cases argued before the supreme court on Civil Rights
Challenging Segregation in Court
A few of the court cases Morgan v. Virginia – (1946) made unconstitutional segregation
seating on interstate buses Sweatt v. Painter – (1950) stated that schools must allow blacks to
enroll even if their were separate but equal black schools Brown v. Board of Education Topeka, Kansas – (1954) made
segregation at schools unconstitutional.
Reaction to Brown Decision
States reacted differently to desegregation some fought it hard while others did not
Little Rock Arkansas was a key ground for 1 of the 1st fights on segregation as 9 students tried to integrate Central HS in Little Rock, AR and had much resistance
The NAACP got involved to help fight the resistance and tensions got very high in the area
Eisenhower was forced to get the Arkansas National Guard involvedEventually this high school was shut down by locals as opposed to
dealing with desegregation
Montgomery Bus Boycott
December 1, 1955 Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on a bus in Montgomery, AL and was arrested for it.
The NAACP called for a bus boycott due to this arrestBecause of these occurrences the local NAACP leaders formed the
Montgomery Improvement Association to organize the boycott and elected a local pastor named Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. to head it up
Martin Luther King and the SCLC
King lead the boycotts and pushed at all cost to continue to protest non-violently
He based his teachings on the teachings of the following: Jesus Henry David Thoreau (a writer that spoke on civil disobedience) A. Phillip Randolph (organizing massive demonstrations) Mohandas Ghandi (nonviolence resistance of oppression)
Martin Luther King and the SCLC
In 1957 following the Bus Boycott he founded the (SCLC) Southern Christian Leadership Conference
This was to carry on non-violent protests towards more civil rights Ella Baker was the 1st director of the SCLC They formed the “snick” or the Student Nonviolent Coordinating
Committee to fight injustices in schools
The Movement Spreads
! Type of protest they regularly had was called a sit in where blacks would sit at segregated lunch tables and refuse to move
These movements began to show up on tv and caused many violent scenes and more and more began to pop up across the country
Section 2
The Triumphs of a Crusade
Riding for Freedom
1961 segregation activists got on a bus to challenge bus segregation hoping people would enact violence against them so they could get the government to enforce the law
In Anniston, AL Bus 2 was attacked by about 200 peopleThe bus company refused to carry the CORE members any farther
after their bus was destroyed so a different bus company agreed to carry them
When they got to Birmingham they were pulled from the bus by the police and beaten and staged a protest by sitting in the white only waiting room in the bus station for 18 hours
Riding for Freedom
Alabama officials promised the Kennedy’s that they would be safe but when the bus reached Montgomery a group of men with lead pipes and bats met the buses and pulled them from the buses and beat them
There were no cops present during this time The country was outraged (which was what the riders wanted) and
these acts got the ICC to eventually ban all segregation from interstate travel facilities
Standing Firm
James Meredith won a federal court case in 1962 allowing him to integrate Ole Miss.
Governor Ross Barnett refused to allow him in and JFK sent federal marshals' to escort him to class
Riots broke out all over campus resulting in deaths and many injuries Birmingham was a place known for it’s strict enforcement of
segregation in public places and so Fred Shuttlesworth led protests in Birmingham to fight this
Standing Firm
MLK and other protesters were arrested in Birmingham and while in jail planned more protests
On May 2, 1963 many protesters marched and Police Chief “Bull” Connor’s men arrested 959 of them.
May 3rd they led another protest and were hosed down with fire hoses in the streets
Eventually through much national pressure Birmingham ended segregation
Standing Firm
Alabama Governor George Wallace took a stand to prevent The University of Alabama from becoming integrated saying “Segregation today, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever”
Wallace stood in the doorways of the U of Alabama until JFK sent the National Guard in to allow Vivian Jones and James Hood to enter the U of Alabama in 1963.
JFK took a stand for Civil Rights bills and shortly after WWII veteran Medgar Evers was killed by a sniper while planning a boycott in Mississippi by Byron de la Beckwith but Beckwith was never convicted
Marching to Washington
A. Phillip Randolph and Bayard Rustin summoned over 250,000 Americans to march on Washington D.C. to get the Civil Rights bills passed on August 28, 1963
This is where Dr. King gave his famous “I have a dream” speech 2 weeks later in Birmingham 4 girls were killed in Birmingham in the
16th street Baptist church bombing 2 months later JFK was killed July 2nd, 1964 LBJ signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 which prohibited
all discrimination for any reason in America
Fighting for Voting Rights
In June 1964 thousands of people in Mississippi went in to register voters to vote and do away with voting discrepencies
3 civil rights workers went missing in Neshoba County Mississippi during this time and it was later learned they were killed by klansmen and local police
Civil Rights activists formed the Mississippi Freedom Democratic party to give themselves a say in politics and elected Fannie Lou Hamer as the voice of their party in 1964
LBJ afraid he would lose southern democratic votes compromised and gave them 2 seats in their house in order to ban discrimination which in turn angered Hamer after she found out this was done
Fighting for Voting Rights
The SCLC launched another major voting rights campaign in Selma in 1965
Protester Jimmy Lee Jackson was killed in turn prompting Dr. King to lead the 50 mile protest march from Selma to Montgomery
Violence broke out and eventually the Government had to send in troops to escort the marchers to Montgomery
Voting Rights Act of 1965 was passed by LBJ in the summer of 1965 which eliminated the literacy test required to be able to vote
Section 3
•Challenges and Changes in the Movement
African Americans Seek Greater Equality
In the North African-Americans dealt with de facto segregation (segregation that exists due to practice and custom.)
This type of segregation is more difficult to deal with than de jure segregation which is (segregation by law) because you have to change peoples attitudes not just a law
“white flight” took place in most cities as whites moved to the suburbs as blacks moved north into the cities
They saw violence from many people in the northern cities especially Chicago
African Americans Seek Greater Equality
Violence between blacks and white police popped up all over the country
1964 violence between black teens and police occurred in New York City which caused a death and then sparked riots in Harlem
August 11, 1965 5 days after the voting rights bill was passed the largest riots in the country broke out in Watts a black neighborhood in Los Angeles
New Leaders Voice Discontent
Malcolm X was a black rights activist that preached violence as opposed to peace like Dr. King preached
Malcolm X (formerly Malcolm Little) went to jail for burglary at age of 20 and while in jail he studied Islam based on the teachings of Elijah Muhammad head of the “Black Muslims”
Malcolm left and went to the middle east and studied Islam at Mecca and when he returned he changed his tune and was more for trying to fight racism with “ballots instead of bullets”
On February 21, 1965 Malcolm X was shot and killed while giving a speech in Harlem
New Leaders Voice Discontent
Stokely Carmichael was a black leader that after suffering from violence while attempting to participate in a walk for freedom
The SNCC workers that were under Carmichael became very militant and under Carmichaels leadership pushed for “Black Power” (a call for black people to define their own goals and lead their own organizations
In 1966 Huey Newton and Bobby Seale founded a political party they called the Black Panthers in order to fight police brutality in the streets
They preached self defense and studied the teachings of Mao Zedong the Chinese Communist leader
There was a lot of violence between the black panthers and police over the next few years
1968 – A Turning Point in Civil Rights
April 4, 1968 James Earl Ray shot and killed Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. with a high powered rifle while he stood on the balcony of his hotel
Robert Kennedy the day of his death spoke and made a passionate plea for nonviolence but it instead sparked riots all over the country
Mostly in Northern Cities which were hit the hardest with riots Robert Kennedy was then later assassinated in June 1968 by a
Jordanian immigrant upset over his support of Israel
Legacy of the Civil Rights Movement
March 1, 1968 the Kerner Commission released a report stating the bad situation in our country between blacks and whites and made a call for change and a plea for ways to change attitudes
Civil Rights Act of 1968 was passed which was the most significant form of legislation since reconstruction towards racism
This bill ended discrimination in housing More and more blacks begin to graduate college and advance in
society
Legacy of the Civil Rights Movement
By 1970 2/3 of eligible African American voters were registered to vote
The number of black elected officials grew significantly over the yearsJesse Jackson tried to run for President in 1984 and 1988 By 1996-1997 the white flight had reversed the trend of segregation
as most blacks in cities attended inner city schools with fewer than 10% whites in those schools
Affirmative Action was put into play making special efforts to hire or enroll groups that have suffered discrimination in different fields of profession.
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