Civil Rights Freedom Now!.

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Presentation transcript:

Civil Rights Freedom Now!

Sit-Ins Success of Bus boycott & influence of non-violent resistance inspired sit-ins 1st sit-in was Feb. 1960 in Greensboro, NC 4 students launched the sit-in after ordering coffee at Woolworth’s counter They were denied service but stayed until store closed The next day they returned with more protestors Hundreds of protestors by first week https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f82cAuXM4IE

Sit-in successes Sit-ins were successful overall Why? They continued despite arrests & violence *It marked shift in civil rights movement Showed African American impatience with slow pace of change *Student Nonviolence Coordinating Committee (SNCC) formed

Freedom Rides CORE planned nonviolent rides 1961 Dec. 1960 Supreme Court ordered bus facilities open to all (but this was not enforced) CORE sent Freedom Riders through South At each stop, riders checked compliance Initially only mild harassment Riders were arrested for using white only facilities

Results of the Freedom Rides https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d8CAKAXR-AM May 1, busses swarmed by mob in Alabama > firebombed bus & beat riders as they escaped In Birmingham, people hit riders with baseball bats & metal pipes > 1 permanently damaged *NO POLICE ever arrived to help Robert Kennedy sent in federal marshals

Integrating Higher Education NAACP worked to get universities open through courts Univ. of Mississippi was forced to admit James Meredith Sept. 1962 he arrived protected by 500 marshals He was met by a mob of 2500 Meredith graduated in 1963 with limited friendly experiences

James Meredith

Effects of Higher Education JFK’s Response JFK went on TV to reprimand Mississippi for escalating violence “The eyes of the nation & the world are upon you” In June 1963, Gov. of Alabama George Wallace physically blocked 2 students from enrolling With a court order however, Wallace stepped aside

Albany Movement Albany, Georgia *This was a battleground for civil rights More than 500 protestors jailed MLK Jr. was invited to lead more demonstrations > arrested Their tactic was to fill the jails Leaders refused to negotiate with MLK Jr so he left > major defeat *MLK Jr. learned he would only participate in his own-organized events

Birmingham Campaign Birmingham, Alabama Known for strict segregation 1963 MLK Jr. jailed > Here he wrote his “Letter from jail” Used kids as demonstrators 900 arrested > effect? Eugene “Bull” Connor (police chief) used fire hoses & dogs to break up protestors Seen on TV > *Changed nations’ perception

Assassination of Medgar Evers Medgar Evers was the head of the Mississippi NAACP Evers was one of the most effective Civil Rights leaders In 1963, he was shot in his front yard Police arrested KKK member Byron De La Beckwith 2 all-white juries failed to reach a verdict in 2 trials so he went free 30 years later, De La Beckwith was tried again & at age 73 in 1994, he was convicted & sentenced to life in prison

March on Washington August 1963 To build support for the civil rights movement, leaders planned a march at the capital 200,000 people attended One of largest demonstrations ever *MLK Jr. “Dream Speech” “I have a dream that one day this nation will rise up & live out the true meaning of its creed: ‘We hold these truths to be self-evident; that all men are created equal’… I have a dream that my 4 children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but the content of their character. I have a dream today!”

March on Washington

Civil Rights Act of 1964 Kennedy wanted to pass an act ending discrimination in public areas After the March on Washington, LBJ supported a strong civil rights bill Civil Rights Act of 1964 banned discrimination in employment & in public accommodations