Civil Rights Movement Timeline

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Civil Rights Movement
Advertisements

Major Events of the Civil Rights Movement. Pasadena resident and UCLA alum Robinson broke the color barrier by being the first black to play major league.
The Civil Rights Movement: Chapter 38 Review
-Chief Justice Earl Warren in the Brown v. Board decision
Jeopardy Important People Nonviolent Resistance Role of the Government Radical Change Success and Failure Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q.
The Civil Rights Movement
Vocabulary Words and Phrases of the Civil Rights Movement
Civil Rights Movement 1950s and 1960s Primarily looking at Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X.
Non-Violent Protest Groups. Major Civil Rights Groups There were four major nonviolent civil rights groups National Association for the Advancement of.
The Civil Rights Movement: Pre-Movement Conditions in the South Watch: “Never Lose Sight of Freedom” “Rights Denied,” “A Change is Gonna.
Junior History Civil Rights Review. Civil Rights-Political economic and social rights guaranteed under the constitution Civil Rights-Political economic.
APUSH: Civil Rights Movement
CIVIL RIGHTS VOCABULARY 6 Steps to learning new vocabulary Marazano.
The Civil Rights Movement. Civil Rights: Major Details  Lasted approx  It was a movement that was aimed at outlawing racial discrimination.
Civil Rights Movement Explain, describe and identify key events in the Civil Rights Movement.
Civil Rights 1860s-1960s Jim Crow Laws – 1880’s Plessy Vs. Ferguson Chapter 20 – pages Booker T. Washington – 1880s-90s – focused on improving.
The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.
The American Civil Rights Movement
Chapter 4 Civil rights. The Civil Rights Struggle: After the Civil War, African Americans routinely faced discrimination, or unfair treatment based on.
HW Quiz 1. Whose arrest led to the beginning of the Montgomery Bus Boycott? 2. Name the group of black students who, with help from army troops, attended.
Graphic Organizer 8.1B and 8.1C- Civil Rights Civil Rights Movement Leaders: Martin Luther King Jr. Ms. Rosa Parks Malcolm Little aka Malcom.
Civil Rights. The Beginning Southern states secede and form the Confederate States of America; Civil War begins President Lincoln issues.
 July 26, 1948, President Harry Truman issued and Executive Order to Abolish Segregation in the Armed Services  It Was Implemented Over.
Civil Rights Vocab Chapter 18. De Jure Segregation Segregation based on the law Practiced in the South (Jim Crow Laws)
Activism, new legislation, and the Supreme Court advance equal rights for African Americans.
THIS IS With Host... Your Malcolm X Hodge Podge.
SS5H8b Key Events and People of the Civil Rights Movement.
Chapter 23 Review US Civil Rights Movement
Civil Rights Movement.
Civil Rights Movement.
Chapter 4 Civil rights.
Civil Rights Movement How it started, who was involved, who resisted and what were the movements accomplishments 1.
The Modern Civil Rights Movement
Civil Rights Review Civil Rights Act 1964
Civil Rights Movement Chapter 23 Notes.
The Civil Rights Movement 1950’s
The Civil Rights Era: The Movement Makes Gains
Civil Rights Ch. 4.4.
Chapter 21.
The Civil Rights Movement
Objective Trace Major Events of the Civil Rights Movement and evaluate its Impact.
UNIT 12: CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT
Graphic Organizer 8.1B and 8.1C- Civil Rights
Civil Rights Created by Educational Technology Network
Unit Eleven Extension Activity Martin Luther King, Jr.
Civil Rights Chapter 18.
The Civil Rights Movement
Civil Rights USH-8.1.
The Civil Rights Movement
The Civil rights Movement
MAH - CH 21 SEC 1 = CIVIL RIGHTS
Civil Rights Timeline.
What did the Civil Rights Act of 1875 do?
Civil Rights Movement Part II (1960’s)
Civil Rights.
Groups 1 Groups 2 Laws etc.. Leaders All Areas
The Decade of Change: Part 1 Week 2-7
The Civil Rights Movement
“The secret of happiness is freedom. The secret of freedom is courage
The American Civil Rights Movement
A TIMELINE OF KEY EVENTS
Civil Rights Era USVA SOL Part XII.
Civil Rights Movement Begins
Civil Rights.
The Civil Rights Movement
People Places Organizations Politics Famous Faces 1pt 1 pt 1 pt 1pt
Pictorial Timeline of the Civil Rights Movement
The Civil Rights Movement
The Civil Rights Movement
The Civil Rights Movement ( )
Presentation transcript:

Civil Rights Movement Timeline Name:____________________________________________________________________ Period: __________________ Date:_________________________ Ms Phillips: US II Civil Rights Movement Timeline DIRECTIONS: Using the book and the list of events on the back of this page, identify the 6 most important events of the Black Civil Rights Movement. Place them on the timeline and explain why they were important/made the cut for the timeline. Date Event Significance Date Event Significance Date Event Significance Date Event Significance Date Event Significance Date Event Significance

1896: The Supreme Court ruled “separate but equal” laws are legal in the Plessy v Ferguson decision. May 17, 1954: Brown v. Board of Education Topeka case where the Supreme Court bans segregation in all public schools in the United States. December 1, 1955: In Montgomery, Alabama, Rosa Parks refuses to give up her seat for a white man, causing a bus boycott by the Black community. February 1957: The Southern Christian Leadership Conference was established by Martin Luther King, Fred L. Shuttlesworth and Charles K. Steele. December 21, 1956: The Montgomery bus system desegregates. September 1957: The Little Rock Central High school board votes on school integration and the “Little Rock 9” are allowed to attend public, desegregated school. February 1, 1960: Four black students from the North Carolina Agricultural and Technical College in North Carolina stage a sit-in at a lunch counter where they are refused service. The beginning of the “Sit ins” May 1, 1961: Student volunteers called “freedom riders” begin testing state laws prohibiting segregation on buses and railways stations. October 1, 1962: James Meredith enrolls at the University of Mississippi (Ole Miss) by using the integration laws. June 12, 1963: Governor Wallace stands in the schoolhouse door of the University of Alabama before being forced by Kennedy to allow black students to enroll. August 28, 1963: 20,000 blacks and whites gather at the Lincoln Memorial to hear speeches against racism; among them is Martin Luther King Jr’s “I Have a Dream.” January 23, 1964: A poll tax used to prevent blacks from voting is outlawed with the 24th Amendment. Summer 1964: The Mississippi Summer Freedom Project begins; civil rights workers help blacks register to vote. 3 are killed and many black churches and homes are burned in retaliation. July 1, 1964: The Civil Rights Act of 1964 is passed, which forbid racial discrimination. February 21, 1965: Malcolm X splits off from Elijah Muhammad’s Black Muslims and their belief in integration and nonviolence; he is assassinated in retaliation. March 7, 1965: Martin Luther King Jr. leads a 54-mile march to support black voter registration. They marched from Selma to Montgomery. August 10, 1965: Voting Rights Act of 1965 is approved. September 24, 1965: Executive Order 11246 issued by President Johnson to enforce affirmative action. October 1966: The Black Panthers are founded by Bobby Seale and Huey Newton in Oakland, California. April 4, 1968: While outside his home, Martin Luther King Jr. is murdered by James Earl Ray April 11, 1968: Johnson signs the Civil Rights Act of 1968.