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Civil Rights in the 1960s Objective: analyze the importance of civil rights legislations; compare and contrast views of Civil Rights leaders.

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Presentation on theme: "Civil Rights in the 1960s Objective: analyze the importance of civil rights legislations; compare and contrast views of Civil Rights leaders."— Presentation transcript:

1 Civil Rights in the 1960s Objective: analyze the importance of civil rights legislations; compare and contrast views of Civil Rights leaders

2 Birmingham African-Americans in Birmingham wanted to integrate public facilities and gain better job and housing opportunities Spring, 1963 – MLK and SCLC began a protest

3 Hundreds arrested including King
MLK writes “Letter from Birmingham Jail” in response to criticism from white church leaders calling for a calm orderly approach defending his methods

4 Protests continued SCLC (Southern Christian Leadership Conference) recruited children for the marches but did not anticipate the level of violence that would be directed at the children

5 Nation saw horrific images on television of dogs and fire hoses being used on the marchers

6 White leaders agreed to desegregate lunch counters, remove segregation signs, and employee more African-Americans in downtown stores.

7

8 March on Washington Events in Birmingham increase support for passage of new legislation to protect the civil rights of all people. Civil rights organizations planned a huge demonstration to take place in Washington D.C.

9 August 28, 1963 - 250,000 people took part in the March on Washington

10 March ended at the Lincoln Memorial where King gave his ‘I Have a Dream’ speech

11 March united many groups that called for passage of civil rights laws; Kennedy promised support


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