Fighting for Voting Rights

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Voting Rights 28-3 The Main Idea
Advertisements

Freedom Summer 1964 Voter Registration Campaign. Freedom Summer Summer The SNCC targeted black voter registration in the South as the next step.
Section 1:Freedom Now! Section 2:Voting Rights Section 3:Challenges for the Movement Section 4: The Movement Continues CHAPTER 22 The Civil Rights Movement.
Bell Quiz (pgs. 710 – 716) 1) In what city was the first freedom riders bus attacked? 2) What year was James Meredith enrolled in Ole Miss University?
28.3 Voting Rights. Focus Your Thoughts... Which constitutional amendment gave African- Americans the right to vote? When did this occur? In what ways.
Essential Question: What were the significant individuals & accomplishments of the Civil Rights movement? Warm-Up Question: How did Thurgood Marshall use.
SCLC leader and planner of the Montgomery Bus Boycott.
The Civil Rights Movement Voter Registration and Freedom Summer.
By: Karla Salas, Andree Lopez, Adan Garcia.  Freedom Summer was the campaign that started in June of 1964 to get as many African Americans as possible.
Civil Rights Movement 11/19. A nation watches Birm. Protests running out of steam Turn to children ,000 Afr. Am youths march; most arrested The.
10th American History Unit V- A Nation Facing Challenges
Civil Rights Gains Ground. Protests in the South in the 1950’s and 1960’s were met by violence, but eventually resulted in change – Freedom Riders took.
Critical Thinking Why were white Southerners so threatened by blacks voting?
BELLWORK 1.What was SNCC? Why was it successful? 2.What is the NAACP? 3.If you had to join one civil rights group (SNCC, SCLC, NAACP, CORE) which would.
18.3 New Successes and Challenges. Objectives Explain the significance of Freedom Summer and the march on Selma Explain why violence erupted in some Americans.
Laws Support Civil Rights Summarize the cause for passage and the effects of passing civil rights and voting rights legislation, including the 24 th Amendment.
Baltimore Polytechnic Institute May 1, 2012 U.S. History Mr. Green.
Bell Ringer What role does voting play in defining the rights of individuals and groups?
Freedom Summer The Summer Of In prevented many African Americans from voting. The NAACP & College students from the north help the African Americans.
18.2 Challenging Segregation. Lesson Objectives 1. The students will be able to explain the effect of the Sit-In Movement. 2. The students will be able.
1 Political Response Angela Brown Chapter 29 Section 3.
Reading #4: Consequences of the Civil Rights Movement Civil Rights Legislation.
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 Twentieth Century Civil Rights Movement THE RIGHT TO VOTE.
Triumphs & Challenges of the Civil Rights Movement What are issues that come up during the Civil Rights Movement?
Challenging Segregation. The Sit-In Movement Many African American college students saw the sit-in movement as a way to take things into their own hands.
CH 18 SEC 3 Voting Rights I. Gaining Voting Rights The Kennedy administration was worried about the non- violent protests by blacks and their supporters.
The Triumphs of a Crusade Chapter 21 Section 2. Freedom Riders Bus trips across the South; freedom riders (black & whites) to urge govt. to end segregation.
Selma, Alabama 1965 Good place for new campaign 1)Incredibly disproportionate black voter registration 2)Selma had a ruthless sheriff named Jim Clark who.
Martin Luther King and his Impact.  Starts after arrest of Rosa Parks -Was a friend of white liberals -Trained in activism  Boycott of Bus.
Voting Campaigns and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 Chapter 28, Section 3.
Literacy Test What are your reactions to this literacy test? Which parts did you find difficult?
Angela Brown Chapter 29 Section 3
29-2: The Triumphs of a Crusade
New Successes and Challenges
The Civil Rights Movement, JFK, and LBJ
The Civil Rights Movement People and Events
The Civil Rights Movement
“Freedom Summer”.
Unit Eleven Extension Activity Martin Luther King, Jr.
Civil Rights Chapter 18.
Civil Rights 16-2 The Sit-In Movement: Students non-violent protest against segregation. Leaders of the NAACP and SCLC were nervous about the sit-in movement.
Chapter 28 Section 3 The Civil Rights Movement Riddlebarger
Civil Rights Murder Mystery
Voting Rights The Main Idea
The Triumphs of a Crusade
Triumphs of the Movement in the 1960s
Objective: Explain the importance of Civil Rights legislation
MAH - CH 21 SEC 1 = CIVIL RIGHTS
Chapter 28 Section 3 The Civil Rights Movement Riddlebarger
Birmingham, Alabama Blacks in Birmingham wanted to integrate public places, get better jobs and better housing; considered by King as the most segregated.
Civil Rights Movement Part II (1960’s)
1960s Civil Rights Movement
Topic 8c- The Continuation and End to the Civil Rights Movement
SECTION 2 THE TRIUMPHS OF A CRUSADE
Challenging Segregation
Wonderful Wynnsday, April 22
Civil Rights Achievements
Voices of the Civil Rights Movement
Bell Ringer Which do you feel is more effective and why?
Times They Are A Changing...
Challenging Segregation
The Civil Rights Movement PART 3 OF —1975
Martin Luther King, Jr. & the Civil Rights Movement
Times They Are A Changing...
The Mechanics of Civil Rights
“Freedom Summer”.
Triumphs & Challenges of the Civil Rights Movement
The Struggle Continues
Presentation transcript:

Fighting for Voting Rights Essential Question: What methods did civil rights workers use to gain voting rights for African-Americans in the South?

Gaining Voting Rights Attorney General Robert Kennedy urged SNCC leaders to focus on voter registration rather than on protests SNCC, CORE, and other groups founded the Voter Education Project (VEP) to register southern African Americans to vote VEP was a success—by 1964 they had registered more than a half million more African American voters.

Freedom Summer, 1964 Voting registration drive in Mississippi Organized by SNCC 3/4 of volunteers were northern white college students 3 volunteers were murdered, African American James Chaney & whites Michael Schwerner & Andrew Goodman

Selma Campaign MLK Jr. and SCLC organized a march from Selma to Montgomery Selma had a majority of blacks but made up only 3% of the registered voters 600 African Americans began the 54-mile march, but city and state police blocked their way out TV cameras captured police brutality

Edmund Pettus Bridge – “Bloody Sunday”

Voting Rights Act of 1965 Outlawed use of discriminatory devices such as literacy tests and poll taxes and allowed federal officials to monitor voting registration By the end of the year over 250,000 blacks had registered to vote

Talk to your neighbor: What was Freedom Summer and what crisis occurred that summer? What was the purpose of the Selma campaign? What happened during the march? Why is the Voting Rights Act of 1965 significant?