Ch 16-The Civil Rights Movement- Sec 1 The Movment Begins

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Presentation transcript:

Ch 16-The Civil Rights Movement- Sec 1 The Movment Begins

Essential Questions: How had legalized segregation deprived African-Americans of their rights as citizens? How did WWII experiences lay the foundation for the movement? What were key court decisions of the movement? What were the responses to those decisions? Who were the key leaders and organizations of the Civil Rights movement? What were victories of the movement? How did the movement expand and change?

Segregation : The World of Jim Crow 1877-1960’s Many states passed Jim Crow laws The laws required separation of blacks and whites in schools, parks, public buildings, hospitals, and transportation systems Whites and Blacks could not use the same public facilities African American Facilities were always inferior ( Plessy V Fergerson 1896)

Violence towards African- Americans was widespread Lynchings were carried out when mobs seized innocent individuals and tortured, mutilated and hung the victim Those who did it were not caught or punished (KKK)

Discrimination: North Vs South In the South de jure segregation was practiced because of the Jim Crow laws (The Law) In the North de facto segregation was practiced, the not posted or unannounced separation of races ( The Fact) Public Areas, schools, housing, and employment were effectively segregated Bloody Race Riots occurred in NYC in 1900, and Springfield Illinois in 1908, Tulsa in 1921

The Great Migration 1890-1920

Success and Black Pride The 369th Harlem Hell Fighters of WWI Madame CJ Walker became the richest women in America Marcus Garvey’s United Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) gained support in the 1920’s The Harlem Renaissance of the 1920’s

Civil Rights of the 1940’s New job opportunities for Blacks, Latinos, and women 1million African Americans served in WWII Double V Campaign In 1942 Civil Rights leader James Farmer founded the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) to confront segregation in the North First Sit In was used in Chicago, and boycotts In 1943 Race Riot in Detroit, 34 killed A. Phillip Randolph’s March on Washington FDR’s establishing the Fair Labor Practices Commission ( No Discrimination in War Work)

NAACP’s Legal Strategy The NAACP focused on the inequalities between the black/white schools Under lawyer Thurgood Marshall the NAACP would win 29 out of 32 cases Morgan Vs Virginia (1946) - No segregated seating on interstate buses Sweatt Vs Painter (1950) – State Law schools must admit black applicants

Brown V. Board of Education The father of 8 yr old Linda Brown challenged the idea of his daughter traveling 21 blocks to school in Topeka, Kansas Thurgood Marshall argued the case before the Supreme Court (1954) Under Chief Justice Earl Warren the court unanimously struck down school segregation It violated the 14th Amendment and “in public education the doctrine of separate but equal has no place.” 12 million schoolchildren in 21 states were impacted

Montgomery Bus Boycott 1956 In December 1st, 1955 Seamstress and NAACP officer Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on the bus home The Montgomery Improvement Association suggested a boycott and a young 26 yr. old Minister Martin Luther King was elected leader African-Americans filed a lawsuit and boycotted the busses for 381 days A bomb ripped through MLK’s home but in 1956 the Supreme Court outlawed bus segregation

Crisis in Little Rock 1957 In September Gov. Orval Faubus of Arkansas ordered the AK National Guard to turn away nine African American students trying to attend Little Rock’s Central High school A Federal Judge ordered the “Little Rock Nine” be admitted The students were turned away by hostile crowds and guardsman IKE called out the 101st Airborne in support of the Federal Court Order (Troop escort) Civil Rights Act of 1957 gave the Attorney General power over school desegregation

Dr. Martin Luther King Dr. King called his brand of non-violent resistance “Soul Force”. He was influenced by his Christian beliefs, Henry David Thoreau, A. Phillip Randolph, Jesus and Mohandas Gandhi King graduated from Morehouse College King earned a divinity degree from Crozer Theological Seminary in Chester, PA King earned a PH.D from Boston University where he met his wife Coretta Scott King

Dr. King and the SCLC In 1957 King joined with Baptist Ministers and Civil Rights leaders in forming the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) King worked with two Northern pacifists: Beyard Rustin and Glenn Smily Ella Baker was the backbone of SCLC by setting up branches all over the South The Reverend Ralph Abernathy was elected treasurer

Ch 16 Sec 2-Challenging Segregation: Sit-ins In April 1960 Baker helped students at Shaw University organize The Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) Student Activism would be essential In February 1960 sit-in were held at the White Only lunch counter at Woolworth’s in Greensboro, NC By late 1960 students had descended on segregated lunch counters in 48 cities in 11 states resisting violent backlash

The Freedom Rides In 1961 CORE members black and white began riding interstate buses to test the courts decision to end segregation on buses and public places Freedom Riders were attacked and beaten by white mobs in Birmingham and Anniston, AL One bus was firebombed, in Montgomery riders were beaten with bats and pipes RFK sent in 400 Federal Marshals for the rest of the ride to Mississippi The ICC banned segregation in all interstate travel

Integrating Old Miss In Sept. 1962 air-force veteran James Meredith won a case to enroll Gov. Ross Barnett refused to let him register Riots broke out, thousands of soldiers called in, 200 arrests,160 wounded marshals and two deaths

The Movement at High Tide -Birmingham, Alabama The SCLC and Dr. MLK targeted Birmingham, AL to hold a march In April 12, 1963 Dr. MLK was arrested He wrote “Letter from a Birmingham Jail” On May 2nd, 2,000 children marched Chief Bull Conner arrested 959 of them On May 3rd, Police Dogs, high pressure hoses, and clubs were used (National TV Audience) Protests, Boycotts, and Negative Media forced desegregation

JFK sent a Civil Rights Bill to Congress US Marshalls are sent in to desegregate the Univ. of AL Gov. George Wallace stands in the door NAACP’s Medger Evers is gunned down In Sept. a bomb killed four girls in a Baptist Church

The March on Washington To encourage the Congress to pass JFK’s Civil Rights Bill, A. Phillip Randolph and Bayard Rustin organized a march on Washington On August 28th, 1963 more than 250,000 people including 75,000 whites assembled on the national mall All listened to many speaker including Dr. Martin Luther King’s “I have a dream!”

The Civil Rights Act of 1964 After JFK was killed LBJ pledged to continue his work On July 2nd, 1964 LBJ signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 which prohibited discrimination because of race, religion, national origin, and gender It gave all citizens the right to enter libraries, parks, washrooms, restaurants, theaters and all public places It gave more government power to desegregate and created the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission

Freedom Summer In the summer of 1964 CORE and SNCC members under Bob Moses began voting drives in the deep South to register African American voters ( Freedom Summer) In June 1964- 3 civil rights workers disappeared, in Miss. they were murdered by the KKK and local police Project workers suffered 1,000 arrests, 80 beatings, 35 shootings, and 30 bombings Blacks wanted a voice within the Miss. Democratic party, so SNCC organized the Miss. Freedom Democratic Party led by Fannie Lou Hamer ( They were given only 2 of 68 seats)

The Selma Campaign In 1965 SNCC organized a voting campaign in Selma, Alabama 2,000 African-Americans had been arrested On March 7th, 1965 , 600 protestors began the march from Selma to Montgomery, AL Police swung pipes, clubs and used tear-gas – “Bloody Sunday” On March 21, 3,000 members led by MLK with Federal Protection marched The numbers grew to 25,000 marchers

The Voting Rights Act of 1965 That summer LBJ signed the Voting Rights Act of 1965 The act eliminated literacy tests, allowed federal officials to register voters The 24th Amendment to the Constitution eliminated poll taxes

Ch 16 Sec 3- New Civil Rights Issues-Violence Erupts in the cities of the North Centuries of de facto segregation had produced social and economic inequalities ( Racism) Slums, high unemployment, poor schools all contributed to desperation Aggressive Police was a point of contention In July 1964, a race riot erupted in Harlem after a 15 year old black student was killed On Aug. 11th, 1965 the worst riot erupted in Watts, Los Angeles

The Kerner Commission What caused race riots and the destruction? 1960’s Congressional Committee Investigation People suffered in the cities from heightened expectations from the civil rights movement and LBJ’s promises in the Great Society that were not realized “White Racism” created an explosive mixture of poverty, police brutality, and the commission recommended extensive public housing, integrated schools, 2 million new jobs, and a national system of income supplementation

Watts- 34 deaths, $200 million in damages Detroit 1967 – 43 deaths, $40 million in property damages In 1966 and 67 more than 100 riots and violent clashes took place Newark, San Francisco, Milwaukee, Phila., Cleveland, and Dayton

Black Power In June 1966 march it had become evident to MLK that CORE and SNCC had become militant “We shall overrun!” Stokely Carmichael of SNCC preached the slogan “Black Power” the battle cry for militant civil rights

Malcolm X and Black Consciousness Malcolm Little joined The Nation of Islam when he was in prison converted and changed his name to Malcolm X He preached Elijah Muhammad’s views that whites were the cause of the problem and black should separate from society Malcolm X preached black supremacy Malcolm X got media attention which resulted in resentment from other Nation of Islam members In March of 1964 Malcolm X broke with the Nation and went on the pilgrimage to Mecca

The Problem is still here… https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WAF70TdwJqg

“Ballots or Bullets?” Malcolm X returned and preached an extremely moderate message, found a new tolerant Muslim organization(OAU) and proposed working with Dr. MLK On Feb. 21, 1965, Malcolm X was assassinated by members of the Nation of Islam, FBI?

The Black Panthers In October 1966, Huey Newton and Bobby Seale founded the political party the Black Panthers It advocated self-sufficiency, full employment opportunities, decent housing and no military service due to the unfair numbers being drafted and killed in Vietnam Police shootouts occurred and the FBI conducted many investigations Panthers helped out with many community projects in urban ghettos

King, the War and the Assassination On April 3rd, 1968 DR. MLK addressed a crowd in Memphis He was there to support the city striking garbage workers He gave his famous “Promised Land” Speech He was assassinated one day later by James Earl Ray on his hotel balcony

Reaction to King’s Death RFK passionate plea for non-violence in Indianapolis Over 100 cities exploded in flames Baltimore, Chicago, KC, and Washington were the worst RFK was killed in June 1968 by Sirhan Sirhan