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Southern states were against desegregation Individual states tried to ignore the Supreme Court’s decision of 1955 Argued they had states rights to keep.

Dec 23, 2015

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Rachel Dalton
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Page 1: Southern states were against desegregation Individual states tried to ignore the Supreme Court’s decision of 1955 Argued they had states rights to keep.
Page 2: Southern states were against desegregation Individual states tried to ignore the Supreme Court’s decision of 1955 Argued they had states rights to keep.

• Southern states were against desegregation

• Individual states tried to ignore the Supreme Court’s decision of 1955

• Argued they had states rights to keep schools segregated

White school Black school

Page 3: Southern states were against desegregation Individual states tried to ignore the Supreme Court’s decision of 1955 Argued they had states rights to keep.

The crisis came to a head at Little Rock, Arkansas, in 1957…

• The state of Arkansas decided it would desegregate its schools slowly

Page 4: Southern states were against desegregation Individual states tried to ignore the Supreme Court’s decision of 1955 Argued they had states rights to keep.

• 1st school in Arkansas to be desegregated was the Central High School

• The Governor of Arkansas Orville Faubus was against integration

Page 5: Southern states were against desegregation Individual states tried to ignore the Supreme Court’s decision of 1955 Argued they had states rights to keep.

How did Faubus stop black children attending the school?

He sent state soldiers to surround the school

- He said they were there to stop racist violence but the soldiers did not let Black children in the school.

Page 6: Southern states were against desegregation Individual states tried to ignore the Supreme Court’s decision of 1955 Argued they had states rights to keep.

• Faubus was ordered to remove the state soldiers by…

– Federal government

• Faubus removed the troops but knew desegregation would be stopped because …

– a large White mob was also surrounding the school

Page 7: Southern states were against desegregation Individual states tried to ignore the Supreme Court’s decision of 1955 Argued they had states rights to keep.

1st Black student to attend Central High School was called Elizabeth Eckford

Page 8: Southern states were against desegregation Individual states tried to ignore the Supreme Court’s decision of 1955 Argued they had states rights to keep.

That night I couldn’t sleep. Next morning I was the first one to get up. As I walked to the school a large crowd moved closer to me, calling me names. My knees started to shake and I wondered if I would make it to school. The crowd moved closer and closer. Somebody started yelling. ‘Lynch her, lynch her.’ I tried to see a friendly face in the mob. I saw an old lady. She looked kind but then she spat on me. They started shouting. ‘No nigger b**** is going to get into our school. Get out of here.’

Page 9: Southern states were against desegregation Individual states tried to ignore the Supreme Court’s decision of 1955 Argued they had states rights to keep.

• Eventually the President of the USA, Dwight Eisenhower sent 1000 soldiers to Little Rock to make sure the children were safe

• Soldiers stayed in Little Rock for a year, even patrolling the school corridors to make sure children were safe

• Events in Little Rock, Arkansas, attracted world wide attention to the Civil Rights Movement

Page 10: Southern states were against desegregation Individual states tried to ignore the Supreme Court’s decision of 1955 Argued they had states rights to keep.

The importance of Little Rock

• The beginning of educational de-segregation

• Support from the NAACP; highlighting discrimination

• Presidential involvement – Arkansas National Guard taken under federal control

• Media involvement – journalists/ cameras – worldwide attention

• Civil Rights Act of 1957 is introduced

Page 11: Southern states were against desegregation Individual states tried to ignore the Supreme Court’s decision of 1955 Argued they had states rights to keep.

However, it was not successful because…..

• Supreme Court decision on desegregation only applies to education – by 1968, 68% of all Southern schools remain segregated

• Civil Rights campaign continues to bring about desegregation in other areas of society.