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Civil Rights Movements Across America Ch.18. Latinos of Varied Origins  Mexican Americans  1miilion came in 1900s following the Mexican Revolution 

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Presentation on theme: "Civil Rights Movements Across America Ch.18. Latinos of Varied Origins  Mexican Americans  1miilion came in 1900s following the Mexican Revolution "— Presentation transcript:

1 Civil Rights Movements Across America Ch.18

2 Latinos of Varied Origins  Mexican Americans  1miilion came in 1900s following the Mexican Revolution  some came in the 1940’s and 1950’s as braceros, and 1 million came in the 60’s

3 Latinos of Varied Origins  Puerto Ricans  immigrating after the Spanish American War of 1898, and by 1960’s 1miilion in the US  Cubans  Fled Castro’s gov’t after 1959 and large communities formed in NYC, Miami, NJ  1960’s thousand of Central and South American emigrated

4 Latinos Fight For Change  In 1966 Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta merged their new unions to form the United Farm Workers Organizing Committee

5 Latinos Fight For Change  Chavez believed in non-violence in dealing with California’s large fruit and vegetable companies (Ex. Boycotts/Fast)  In the 1960’s the Chicano Movement took off, “Brown Power” and the “Brown Berets” demanded Spanish speaking classes and Chicano studies programs at universities (Bilingual ED. Act of 1968)

6 Native Americans Fight For Equality  Suffered high unemployment rates, alcoholism, infant mortality rates and suicides  In 1961 reps from 61 tribes drafted the Declaration of Indian Purpose  In 1968 LBJ established the National Council on Indian Opportunity

7 Voices of Protests  In 1968 the AIM (American Indian Movement) was formed to demand lands, burial grounds, fishing/ timber rights, and a respect of their culture

8 Women’s movements of the 1960s

9 BackgroundBackground  Second wave of activism.  Drew inspiration from the civil rights movement  It was made up of members of the middle class  It was also caused by the sexual revolution of the 1960s  Sparked by the development of the birth- control pill in 1960

10 National Organization for Women (NOW)  Founded in 1966.  by a group of people, including Betty Friedan, and Rev. Pauli Murray.  The first African- American woman Episcopal priest.  Betty Friedan became the organization's first president.

11 NOW (con’t.)  The goal of NOW is to bring about equality for all women.  They campaigned to gain passage of the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) at the state level.  Issues NOW deals with:  works to eliminate discrimination and harassment in the workplace, schools, and the justice system.  secure abortion, birth control and reproductive rights for all women  end all forms of violence against women  eradicate racism, sexism and homophobia  promote equality and justice in society.

12 Betty Friedan  Wrote the book, Feminine Mystique in 1963.  In her book, she depicted the roles of women in industrial societies.  She focused most of her attention on the housewife role of women.  She referred to the problem of gender roles as "the problem without a name".  The book became a bestseller and was the cause for the second wave of feminism in the 60s. Feb. 4th, 1921- Feb. 4th, 2006 http://us.history.wisc.edu/hist102/p docs/friedan_feminine.pdf

13 First national Commission on the Status of Women  President Kennedy established the first national Commission on the Status of Women in 1961.  In 1963 the commission issued a report detailing employment discrimination, unequal pay, legal inequality, and insufficient support services for working women.

14 Equal Pay Act 1963  It is the first federal law prohibiting sexual discrimination.  In 1963 the average female worker’s wages in the United States were equivalent to 58.9 % of the average male worker’s earnings.  It abolished wage differences based on sex.  “ No employer having employees subject to any provisions of this section [section 206 of title 29 of the United States Code] shall discriminate, within any establishment in which such employees are employed, between employees on the basis of sex by paying wages to employees in such establishment at a rate less than the rate at which he pays wages to employees of the opposite sex in such establishment for equal work on jobs…” -- Equal Pay Act

15 The Civil Rights Act of 1964  Passed in 1964.  It banned discrimination on the basis of color, race, national origin, religion, or sex.  Section VII set up the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) to enforce the act.

16 Roe vs. Wade  1973 Supreme Court Case:  Women had the right to choose an abortion during the first 3 months of pregnancy.

17 1960s Counterculture

18 The Hippie Movement  The term “hippie” comes from being hip. You were either hip or you were a “square” or a “pig.”  Hippies were looking for an alternative way to live life.  Most hippies valued freedom, nature, intimacy, peace, sharing, and spirituality.

19 Way of Life  Hippies wanted to distance themselves from mainstream ways of life.  They discarded possessions and often lived in parks or campsites in the woods.  Living like this made them feel free  Nudity was another form of freedom

20 Counterculture Fashion  Hippies distanced themselves from mainstream culture by their dress.  Colorful, flowing clothing, beads, headbands bellbottoms, and tie-dye were popular.  Men wore their hair and beards long or in afros.  Hippies were often called “longhairs”

21 San Francisco and Haight Ashbury  San Francisco was the birthplace of the counterculture/hippy movement.  By 1965 hippies had taken over the Haight Ashbury district.  Haight Ashbury district contains Golden Gate Park home of the Trips Festival This is a 20,000-strong be-in at Golden gate park in 1967

22 Hippie Music  The most popular music of the time was psychedelic rock  Bands like Jefferson Airplane, Quicksilver Messenger Service, the Jimi Hendrix Experience and the Grateful Dead played free concerts at Golden Gate Park.  Concerts were places for hippies to protest, socialize, dance, or take drugs.  At Woodstock over 250,000 hippies showed up to hear artists like Janis Joplin, The Who, Canned Heat, The Allman Brothers, and County Joe and the Fish.

23 Woodstock  Woodstock was not just a music concert. “For thousands who couldn’t even hear the music” it was a “profound religious experience.”  Meager resources were shared with everyone.  Many people at Woodstock used illegal drugs

24 Drug Culture  Drugs like marijuana and LSD were a big part of the hippy/counterculture movement.  Using drugs made hippies feel like the were rebelling from mainstream society.


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