Voices of the Civil Rights Movement

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
New Successes & Challenges
Advertisements

29-2: The Triumphs of a Crusade
Vocabulary Words and Phrases of the Civil Rights Movement
Objectives Explain the significance of Freedom Summer, the march on Selma, and why violence erupted in some American cities in the 1960s. Compare the goals.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Civil Rights 1964–1975.
Civil Rights Movement - Part 2 Quiz Review Game. Explain long-term factors and the spark that started the riots. Long-term factors:Spark: Police-Community.
Civil Rights Vocab Chapter 20. De Jure Segregation Segregation based on the law Practiced in the South (Jim Crow Laws)
Kennedy, Johnson, and Civil Rights Chapter 29, Section #2.
Civil Rights. Laws that were passed Laws that were passed Civil Rights Act of 1957 Civil Rights Act of 1957 –Protected the rights of African American.
THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT Chapter 17; Section 3. NEW SUCCESSES & CHALLENGES THE PUSH FOR VOTING RIGHTS In the summer of 1964, student volunteers, both.
The Civil Rights Movement Ch. 21.  After World War II many question segregation  NAACP—wins major victory with Supreme Court decision Brown vs. Board.
Civil Rights Movement. WWII opened the door for the civil rights movement. WWII opened the door for the civil rights movement. In 1941, Roosevelt banned.
Martin Luther King Jr. in the Civil Rights Movement “The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort & convenience, but where.
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.
The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.
Introduction to Civil Rights Movement Explain, describe and identify key events in the Civil Rights Movement.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Lunchroom Segregation Map Tracking ① Meet up with your group members. ② Have.
  NAACP – worked toward full legal equality for all Americans.  National Urban League – focused on economic equality.  CORE – pursued.
Chapter 14 The Civil Rights Movement. “de jure” segregation in the South separate but equal segregation in schools, hospitals, transportation, restaurants,
American History Civil Rights Challenge Final Jeopardy Final Jeopardy People Misc. Events Organizations Review
Unit 11 Vocabulary. Civil Rights Movement efforts made by African Americans and their supporters in the 1950s and 1960s to eliminate segregation and gain.
Aim #85: How do the goals, philosophies and strategies differ amongst civil rights leaders and groups? Do now! Read the 3 excerpts and answer the accompanying.
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 Vocab Chapter 18. De Jure Segregation Segregation based on the law Practiced in the South (Jim Crow Laws)
New Successes and challenges
Civil Rights in the 1940s–1950s.
29-2: The Triumphs of a Crusade
Civil Rights Act 1964 & Voting Rights Act 1965
The Civil Rights Movement
Civil Rights Movement 1950s-Present.
Outcome: The Movement Changes
Civil Rights & The Warren Court
New Successes and Challenges
Chapter 18 Civil Rights.
The Political Response
Graphic Organizer 8.1B and 8.1C- Civil Rights
Civil Rights Created by Educational Technology Network
Civil Rights Chapter 18.
Civil Rights 1948 Pres. Truman integrates the military
CH. 18 Sec. 2,3 & 5 Essential Questions:
Civil Rights and Reform in the 1960s ( )
Warm-up: What is the difference between de jure segregation and de facto segregation and give an example of each.
Outcome: The Movement Changes
Outcome: The Movement Changes
Voting Rights The Main Idea
New Successes and Challenges
Section 4: Disappointed Hopes
Civil Rights Vocab Chapter 18 – Unit 4 – 19 words.
Civil Rights After 1965.
Outcome: The Movement Changes
Topic 8c- The Continuation and End to the Civil Rights Movement
Groups 1 Groups 2 Laws etc.. Leaders All Areas
Outcome: The Movement Changes
Objectives Explain the significance of Freedom Summer, the march on Selma, and why violence erupted in some American cities in the 1960s. Compare the goals.
Civil Rights 1964–1975.
Early Civil Rights Movement
Times They Are A Changing...
Objectives Explain the significance of Freedom Summer, the march on Selma, and why violence erupted in some American cities in the 1960s. Compare the goals.
The Civil Rights Movement PART 3 OF —1975
Disenfranchisement : is the revocation of the right of suffrage of a person or group of people, or through practices, prevention of a person exercising.
Martin Luther King, Jr. & the Civil Rights Movement
Times They Are A Changing...
The Civil Rights Movement
Civil Rights in the 1940s–1950s.
Outcome: The Movement Changes
Successes & Challenges After 1964
The Struggle Continues
The Civil Rights Movement ( )
Civil Rights Movement Chapter 29 Section 3 Part 2.
Presentation transcript:

Voices of the Civil Rights Movement

Objectives Explain the significance of Freedom Summer, the march on Selma, and why violence erupted in some American cities in the 1960s. Compare the goals and methods of African American leaders. Describe the social and economic situation of African Americans by 1975.

The Voters Rights Act https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EI7Ak17cI84

In 1964, many African Americans were still denied the right to vote. Southern states used literacy tests, poll taxes, and intimidation to prevent African Americans from voting. The major civil rights groups decided to end this injustice.

The campaign was known as Freedom Summer. Three campaign volunteers were murdered, but other volunteers were not deterred. In the summer of 1964, the SNCC enlisted 1,000 volunteers to help African Americans in the South register to vote. The campaign was known as Freedom Summer.

One of the Key Leaders: Martin Luther King Jr. Clergyman, Activist, Leader of SCLC Preached for change through non-violent means Key organizer in numerous civil rights events Most known for his “letters from a Birmingham Jail” and his “I have a dream” speech in Washington https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aL4FOvIf7G8 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=smEqnnklfYs

In March 1965, Rev. King organized a march on Selma, Alabama, to pressure Congress to pass voting rights laws. Once again, the nonviolent marchers were met with a violent response. And once again, Americans were outraged by what they saw on national television. President Johnson himself went on television and called for a strong voting rights law. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aODXzux3hsg https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U0yDPmdlAL0

The Voting Rights Act of 1965 was passed. Banned literacy tests Empowered the federal government to oversee voter registration and elections in states that discriminated against minorities Extended to include Hispanic voters

President Johnson also called for a federal voting rights amendment President Johnson also called for a federal voting rights amendment. The Twenty-fourth Amendment to the Constitution, which banned the poll tax, was ratified. At the same time, Supreme Court decisions were handed down that limited racial gerrymandering and established the legal principle of “one man, one vote.”

Discrimination and poverty continued to plague Northern urban centers. The Voting Rights Act stirred growing African American participation in politics. Yet life for African Americans remained difficult. Discrimination and poverty continued to plague Northern urban centers. Simmering anger exploded into violence in the summer of 1967. Watts in Los Angeles; Newark, New Jersey; and Detroit, Michigan, were the scene of violent riots. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B6PVzar8jw4

Johnson appointed the Kerner Commission to determine the cause of the riots. The Commission found that long-term racial discrimination was the single most important cause of violence. The commission’s findings were controversial. Because of American involvement in the Vietnam War, there was little money to spend on the commission’s proposed programs.

He led the Nation of Islam until 1964. He was assassinated in 1965. In the mid-1960s, new African Americans leaders emerged who were less interested in nonviolent protests. One was Malcolm X, a minister in the Nation of Islam, which called for African Americans to break away from white society. He led the Nation of Islam until 1964. He was assassinated in 1965. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gRSgUTWffMQ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hhg6LxyTnY8 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h4PqLKWuwyU

The Black Panthers was a militant group organized to protect blacks from police abuse. became the symbol of young militant African Americans. created antipoverty programs. protested attempts to restrict their right to bear arms. Several SNCC leaders urged African Americans to use their black power to gain equality.

Although he understood their anger, King continued to advocate nonviolence. He created a “Poor Peoples’ Campaign” to persuade the nation to do more to help the poor. He traveled to Memphis, Tennessee, in 1968 to promote his cause and to lend support to striking sanitation workers. Martin Luther King, Jr., was assassinated on April 3, 1968, in Memphis.

By the late 1960s, the civil rights movement had made many gains. increased economic opportunities for African Americans an African American man was appointed to the Supreme Court integrated many schools and colleges eliminated legal segregation knocked down voting and political barriers banned housing discrimination The work continued into later decades. And there is still room for further improvement…

Voter ID Laws