Freedom Now The Civil Rights Movement Chapter 20, Section 2 Notes Page 674-679.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
20.2 Freedom Now.
Advertisements

Objectives Describe efforts to end segregation in the 1940s and 1950s.
The Civil Rights Movement.
The Civil Rights Movement
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.
Chapter 20 Section 1 Civil Rights Movement
Integrated prom How is it that Wilcox High has been having segregated proms all this time? Who in Wilcox county is organizing to have an integrated prom?
 What would the Civil Rights Movement be without the brave men and women who fought for equal rights? These leaders dedicated their lives to ending slavery,
The Civil Rights Movement Signs of Change 1947 MLB desegregated 1948 Armed forces integrated But still segregated in southern facilities (Plessey) and.
Civil Rights Vocab Chapter 20. De Jure Segregation Segregation based on the law Practiced in the South (Jim Crow Laws)
Montgomery Bus Boycott Leaving Cert History: Case Study.
2.  The desegregation of transportation systems in the South began at 5:30 p.m. on Thursday, December 1,  Seamstress Rosa Parks changed America.
Lord - Upper Cape Tech School Fighting 4 The Cause Legal Aspects Equality Groups &
The Civil Rights Movement
Jillian and Kaela.  The Southern Christian Leadership Conference was formed to coordinate efforts throughout the South. Their purpose was to work toward.
Exploring American History Unit IX- Postwar America Chapter 28 – Section 1 The Civil Rights Movement Takes Shape.
Taking on Segregation Chapter 21, Section 1 Notes.
CIVIL RIGHTS VOCAB DIRECTIONS: Write down as much information as you can about each of the following key people, groups and events from the Civil Rights.
The Modern Civil Rights Movement Chapter 28 Section 2.
Freedom Now Section 17.2 Young blacks protest Jim Crow via sit-in at a lunch counter.
The civil Rights Movement
QOD 3/10 QOD: Why did the citizens of Montgomery, Alabama chose a boycott as their method for changing the transportation system of the city?
The Civil Rights Movement
Who is this?. Rosa Parks Seamstress in Montgomery, Alabama Dec. 1, 1955—refused to give up her seat on a bus to a white passenger Arrested by the police.
Unit Six The African-American. Unit 6 African- American  Para. 1  Martin Luther King was an American civil rights leader who worked to bring about social,
SCLC v. SNCC A comparison of the two leading civil rights groups of the 1960’s.
The Civil Rights Movement. Civil Rights: Major Details  Lasted approx  It was a movement that was aimed at outlawing racial discrimination.
March 13, Unit VIII Introduction: Civil Rights Movement Notes (part 1) The Movement Begins 3. Video Clip: Brown vs. Board of Education.
CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT. 14 th Amendment Purpose was to make sure that southern states were treating freed slaves equally under the law. Incorporated the.
Leslie Cigny javeil Angelina Wilson. The most impressive thing about Martin Luther King Jr is how he ended segregation. Segregation is the separation.
The Civil Rights Movement
Civil Rights Era Montgomery Bus Boycott Montgomery, Alabama – Rosa Parks was arrested because she refused to give up her bus seat to a white passenger.
Bell Quiz: Write Around Instructions: 1. Take out a piece of paper and write your name on the upper right corner. 2. You will have 3 minutes to write your.
The Civil Rights Movement: Leaders & Strategies Mr. Dodson.
Civil Rights Organizations 1909 – 1960 Which organizations were best suited to change laws, change attitude, organize the most people?
Bell Quiz (Pages ) 1) Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. base his non-violent ideas on the teachings of 3 people. Name the 3 people. 2) In what year was.
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 Civil Rights Era 1954 – 1975 Objectives: Why efforts to gain civil rights created an effective movement for change How the Civil Rights movement led.
Introduction to Civil Rights Movement Explain, describe and identify key events in the Civil Rights Movement.
CIVIL RIGHTS. GROUPS INVOLVED IN CIVIL RIGHTS NAACP - (National Association for the Advancement of Coloured People) UNIA - (Universal Negro Improvement.
The American Civil Rights Movement
Civil Rights Key Terms Chapter 20.
Bellringer 2//12 1. Where do you think this picture was taken? Why? 2. When do you think the picture was taken? Why? 3. What does the picture tell you.
The Civil Rights Movement Unit 10 “The black revolution is much more than a struggle for the rights of Negroes. It is forcing America to face all its interrelated.
Civil Rights Movement
Civil Rights Movement Objective: analyze how nonviolent protests helped secure Civil RightsObjective: analyze how nonviolent protests helped secure Civil.
Civil Rights Part 1 Segregation. In the Beginning….. Declaration of Independence Declaration of Independence “All Men are Created Equal” “All Men are.
W I T H H I S T O R Y I N T E R A C T What rights are worth fighting for? Examine the Issues The year is 1960, and segregation divides the nation’s people.
Wanted Rosa Parks Age: 43 Would not to give up her bus seat to a white man Montgomery, Alabama: December 1, 1955.
Civil Rights Vocab Chapter 18. De Jure Segregation Segregation based on the law Practiced in the South (Jim Crow Laws)
The Civil Rights Movement
In 1955, Rosa Parks’ arrest for disobeying an Alabama law requiring segregation on city buses sparked the Montgomery Bus Boycott.
The Montgomery Bus Boycott
Civil Rights Movement:
Montgomery Bus Boycott
Chapter Day 1 Freedom Now!
III. Martin Luther King Jr.
#44 Chapter 21 Civil Rights Section 1 Taking on Segregation
African American Civil Rights Caesar Chavez and the UFW
Objectives Describe efforts to end segregation in the 1940s and 1950s.
The Civil Rights Movement
What did the Civil Rights Act of 1875 do?
Section 1 Taking on Segregation
The Civil Rights Movement
“The secret of happiness is freedom. The secret of freedom is courage
Opening Assignment If you faced the threat of violent retaliation by the government or other citizens would you peacefully protest for a cause?
Do now 11/7/16 Negroes – Sweet and docile. Meek, humble and kind. Beware the day they change their mind. --Langston Hughes How do you think this applies.
The Civil Rights Movement Leaders And Strategies
Civil Rights Movement.
Module: Civil Rights Lesson 1: Taking on Segregation
Presentation transcript:

Freedom Now The Civil Rights Movement Chapter 20, Section 2 Notes Page

The Bus Boycott Although the civil rights movement had already begun, the decision by Rosa Parks not to give up her seat on a segregated bus set in motion a chain of events that thrust the movement into the forefront. Civil rights leaders such as Jo Ann Robinson and Martin Luther King, Jr., organized a boycott of the Montgomery bus system, which had Parks arrested.

King’s house was bombed and 88 other African American leaders were arrested, but the boycott stayed in effect. The end finally came when the Supreme Court ruled that segregation on Montgomery buses was unconstitutional. FBI director J. Edgar Hoover was no supporter of Martin Luther King, Jr. He compiled information to use against the civil rights leader. When King won the Nobel Peace Prize, Hoover redoubled his efforts to discredit King and turn government leaders against him.

Martin Luther King, Jr. After the Montgomery boycott, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., emerged as the unchallenged leader of the African American protest movement. At a conference of 60 Southern ministers, King was appointed president of the newly formed Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC).

From the start, King urged his followers to use nonviolent resistance. King linked his ideas to the Christian theme of loving one’s enemy. He also knew of and studied the ideas of Mohandas Gandhi. The Gandhian strategy of nonviolence involved four steps: investigation, negotiation, publicity, and demonstration. Basically civil rights organizers followed these steps to challenge segregation.

Soon after the victory in Montgomery, nonviolent methods were used in a startling new way by students in colleges and universities all over the country. They vowed to integrate the nation’s segregated lunch counters, hotels, and entertainment facilities using a simple strategy—sitting.

A Season of Sit-ins After African American students from North Carolina Agricultural and Technical College organized the first sit-in, backed by a boycott of stores with segregated lunch counters, the sit-in movement spread like wildfire. By September 1961 some 70,000 African American and white students were sitting in for social change. The targets of many sit-ins were part of national chains. In some Northern cities, students picketed stores in the same chain.

Students used variations of the sit-ins to integrate other segregated facilities: “kneel-ins” at churches, “read-ins” in libraries, “wade-ins” at beaches, and “sleep-ins” in motel lobbies. The driving center of the civil rights movement had spread from the legal committees of the NAACP and African American churches to college campuses. The students were impatient. Inspired by the freedom movements in Africa, they sought change at home.

Ella J. Baker, executive secretary of King’s SCLC, was impressed with the courage and commitment of students. She called together some of the student leaders of sit- ins in a 1960 conference. Out of that meeting came a new civil rights organization, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC).

King addressed the founders of SNCC, stressing the moral power of nonviolence. One of the slogans warmly applauded by students was “jail not bail. ” In adopting this slogan, SNCC followed an American tradition of civil disobedience. Within a year SNCC evolved into a full- fledged civil rights organization poised to break down the system of segregation that divided American society.