How successful were ‘Sit-ins’ and ‘Freedom Rides’ as campaign methods?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 25 Section 3. Boycott: A nonviolent protest in which people refuse to buy products or use services Sit-in: A nonviolent protest in which people.
Advertisements

Freedom Riders. Founding and Purpose On May 4 th of 1961, the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) organized “Freedom Rides.” To integrate blacks’ and whites’
The Civil Rights Movement
Visual History of 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?
APUSH Review: Civil Rights in the 1960s Everything You Need To Know About Civil Rights in the 1960s To Succeed In APUSH
The Movement Gains Ground
Section 2: The Struggle Intensifies.  Objectives  Describe the goals of sit-ins and Freedom Rides and the reactions they provoked.  Summarize civil.
American History Chapter 28-2 Freedom Now!. Could you keep your cool?
Buses and Lunch Counters Movements to Integrate Public Accommodations.
The Civil Rights Movement Birmingham, Alabama U.S. Supreme Court ruled that segregation in interstate travel was unconstitutional Many wondered.
Riding into Risk The Freedom Riders.
QOD 3/12 As the turning point of the Civil Rights Movement, how did the success of the Montgomery Bus Boycott influence other events during the Civil Rights.
Freedom Now! 28-2 The Main Idea The quest for civil rights became a nationwide movement in the 1960s as African Americans won political and legal rights,
Civil Rights Activism, new legislation, and the Supreme Court advance equal rights for African Americans. But disagreements among civil rights groups lead.
Civil Rights Protests How did African-Americans achieve equality?
The Civil Rights Movement. Montgomery Bus Boycott Boycotting Segregation 1955 NAACP officer Rosa Parks arrested for not giving up seat on bus Montgomery.
1960 Supreme Court decision banned segregation on interstate buses and trains –e.g. rest rooms, waiting rooms and restaurants for travellers 1961 students.
The Struggle Intensifies The Civil Rights Movement 21.3 The Civil Rights Movement 21.3.
Do Now 1)What was nonviolent protest? 2) What are some additional strategies might nonviolent protesters utilize?
THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT. Plessy v. Ferguson  Civil Rights Act of 1875 outlawed segregation  Declared unconstitutional in 1883  Plessy v. Ferguson.
Triumphs of a Crusade. Emmet Till Freedom Riders A trip of two buses across the south, fighting segregation of public buses – hoping to force the JFK.
Add to your notebook Unit 8 Civil Rights Civil Rights Movement Beginnings (44)1.
28.2: No Easy Road to Freedom, 1957–62. MAP 28.1 The Civil Rights Movement Key battlegrounds in the struggle for racial justice in communities across.
Triumphs of the Crusade Civil rights activists break through racial barriers Activism prompts landmark legislation (Corresponds to 21.2)
Bell Ringer Turn to p. 570 and read the quotation by John Lewis. Could you have endured what the lunch-counter protesters did without running away or defending.
Freedom Rides Lesson starter:
Describe the sit ins. Explain the effects of the sit ins.
THE STRUGGLE INTENSIFIES. “There comes a time my friends when people get tired of being plunged across the abyss of humiliation…We had no alternative.
Republican Richard Nixon offered experience Served 8 years as VP Had foreign policy experience during the critical stages of the Cold War Promised to keep.
Brought to you by CORE – Congress of Racial Equality.
Bell Quiz (pgs. 710 – 716) 1) What was the purpose of the Freedom Riders? 2) How did the violence against Freedom Riders affect President Kennedy? 3) Why.
Civil Rights Freedom Now!. Sit-Ins Success of Bus boycott & influence of non- violent resistance inspired sit-ins 1 st sit-in was Feb in Greensboro,
Freedom Now! Chapter 22 Section 1.
Sit Ins and Freedom Rides The Campaign Takes Off.
Bell Quiz (pgs. 710 – 716) 1) What was the purpose of the Freedom Riders? Riders? 2) In what city was the first freedom riders bus attacked? 3) What year.
Non-violent Protests Sit-ins, 1960 Freedom rides, 1961 How did Blacks attempt to bring about change between 1955 and 1965?
Today’s Schedule – 05/05/ Vocab, Timeline Check & Standards 28.3 PPT: The Struggle Intensifies Movie: Mississippi Burning HW: – 28.4 Vocab and Timeline.
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.
Freedom Now! The Main Idea The quest for civil rights became a nationwide movement in the 1960s as African Americans won political and legal rights, and.
Sit-ins and Freedom Rides
How successful were ‘Sit-ins’ and ‘Freedom Rides’ as campaign methods?
Civil Rights Review Civil Rights Act 1964
The Civil Rights Era: The Movement Makes Gains
1957: - SCLC formed, fights bus segregation in Tallahassee and Atlanta. - Little Rock Crisis, in Little Rock, Arkansas - Civil Rights Act of 1957 Strom.
The Struggle Intensifies
The Freedom Riders We are exploring: The events of the Freedom Rides
Challenging Segregation Pgs
In 1955, Rosa Parks’ arrest for disobeying an Alabama law requiring segregation on city buses sparked the Montgomery Bus Boycott.
Sit-Ins, Freedom Riders and MLK
Freedom Riders Letter from a Birmingham Jail
The Montgomery Bus Boycott
Civil Rights and Reform in the 1960s ( )
16.2 Challenging Segregation
The Movement.
Civil Rights and Protests
Do Now: Complete the Civil Rights chronology activity (handout).
The Freedom Riders.
The Civil Rights Movement
Chapter 28 Section 2 The Civil Rights Movement Riddlebarger
Civil Rights Protests Objective: Describe the significance of the various forms of protest on the Civil Rights movement.
Chapter 21-Section 2-The Triumphs of a Crusade
Questions How did the sit-in movement begin?
Civil Rights Protests Objective: Describe the significance of the various forms of protest on the Civil Rights movement.
THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT
CHAPTER 21 – CIVIL RIGHTS.
8.1b Analyze the African American Civil Rights Movement, including initial strategies, landmark court cases and legislation, the roles of key civil rights.
Freedom Rides Lesson starter:
Presentation transcript:

How successful were ‘Sit-ins’ and ‘Freedom Rides’ as campaign methods? L/O – To evaluate the effects of the Sit-ins and Freedom Rides on the civil rights movement http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xbbcjn4d1cE

Consequences of the Greensboro Sit-in – February 1960 Sit-Ins Consequences of the Greensboro Sit-in – February 1960 Produced positive publicity for the civil rights movement as TV showed black non-violence in the face of white violence. Were easier & quicker to organise so helped the movement spread and got more people involved By April 1960, Sit-ins spread to over 78 communities across the South with over 2000 arrested. By end of 1961, 810 towns & cities had desegregated public areas. Drew in student support, black and white, from universities all over the USA with over 70,000 having taken part by September 1961 Led to the setting up of SNCC (Student Non-violent Co-ordinating Committee), which became an important civil rights organisation Other protests tried to copy it: ‘Kneel-ins’ to integrate churches, ‘wade-ins’ at beaches, ‘read-ins’ at libraries etc… In Feb 1960, 4 black students in Greensboro, North Carolina, decided to hold a sit-in to integrate a local lunch counter. They were joined by 27 more the next day and on the 5th day, there were over 300 people. They copied the tactics of MLK and didn’t retaliate when arrested or attacked and eventually, Woolworths abandoned segregation.

‘Explain one effect of the Greensboro Sit-ins on the USA’ (4 marks) This question is about ‘an effect’ which means the results of or the consequences of an event. It can be answered in one paragraph. Begin with, ‘One effect was…’ Don’t tell the story! Give the effect and explain it (PEE). Use ‘because’ or ‘as a result’ to help you give a developed explanation. Level Descriptor Mark Level 1 Simple explanation of consequence The student gives an explanation which lacks any supporting contextual knowledge or makes unsupported generalisations. 1-2 Level 2 Explanation of consequence The student gives an explanation supported by relevant knowledge. 3-4

Freedom Riders In Dec 1960, the Supreme Court ordered the desegregation of all bus station facilities. CORE and the SNCC set up ‘freedom rides’. Buses drove through the South ‘testing’ the facilities in bus stations to make sure they were integrated. The riders wanted to create a crisis that would get publicity worldwide so the government would be forced to enforce the law more decisively.

Anniston, Alabama – May 14th 1961 The first two buses were attacked and the riders were beaten up at stops. At Anniston, Alabama, one of the buses was firebombed and people were stopped from escaping. When passengers did escape, they were beaten. White freedom riders were more severely beaten. Why?

Birmingham, Alabama – May 14th-20th 1961 At Birmingham there was no protection for the freedom riders as the police chief (Bull Connor) had given most of the police the day off! As a result, they were attacked by the mob and many were arrested. This forced President John F. Kennedy to intervene and he secured a promise from the state senator in Jackson that there would be no mob violence.

Results of the Freedom Rides By the summer of 1961, over 300 riders had been imprisoned, 3 killed and many more beaten up. It only stopped when Attorney General Robert Kennedy promised to send in US marshals to enforce the law. On 22 September 1961, the Interstate Commerce Commission issued a regulation which effectively desegregated buses. Success! Consequences of the Freedom Riders - 1961 Interstate bus routes were desegregated. Produced positive publicity for the civil rights movement as TV showed black non-violence in the face of white violence. Forced the President (JFK) and Attorney General to intervene, further enhancing the publicity of civil rights Ku Klux Klan attacks increased More young Americans both white and black were becoming involved in the civil rights movement

Homework Answer questions 1-2 in Edexcel iGCSE History page 205. Read pages 47-48 in ‘A divided Union’ & answer questions 1-6 on page 48. Read pages 49-51 and answer questions 1-5 on page 51.