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Taking on Segregation Section 29-1 pp. 906-915 “…in the field of public education the doctrine of ‘separate but equal’ has no place. Separate educational facilities are inherently unequal.” -Chief Justice Earl Warren in the Brown v. Board decision
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Taking on Segregation

Mar 15, 2016

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Taking on Segregation. “…in the field of public education the doctrine of ‘separate but equal’ has no place. Separate educational facilities are inherently unequal.” -Chief Justice Earl Warren in the Brown v. Board decision. Section 29-1 pp. 906-915. The Segregation System. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Taking on Segregation

Taking on Segregation

Section 29-1pp. 906-915

“…in the field of public education the doctrine of ‘separate but equal’ has no place. Separate

educational facilities are inherently unequal.”-Chief Justice Earl Warren in the Brown v. Board

decision

Page 2: Taking on Segregation

The Segregation System • Jim Crow laws kept African

Americans living as second class citizens

• WWII and Civil Rights– New jobs– Served in military– FDR outlawed discrimination

Page 3: Taking on Segregation

Challenging Segregation in Court• NAACP

– Legal team headed by Thurgood Marshall

– Challenged segregation through court cases

Page 4: Taking on Segregation

Challenging Segregation in Court• Brown v. Board of

Education (1954) – Outlawed

segregation in public schools

• Brown II (1955)– Ordered

integration to happen more quickly

Page 5: Taking on Segregation

Reaction to Brown• Little Rock Nine

(1957)– AR Gov. refused to

integrate schools– Eisenhower sends

National Guard to escort students to school

Page 6: Taking on Segregation

The Montgomery Bus Boycott– First organized

movement to fight segregation

– Led by Dr. M.L. King– In 1956, the

Supreme Court ruled segregated buses illegal

Rosa Parks Interviewed Rosa Parks challenged

discrimination on city buses

Page 7: Taking on Segregation

Martin Luther King and the SCLC• Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

– Promoted • Nonviolence• Civil disobedience

– Methods• Huge demonstrations• Boycotts

– 1957: Formed SCLC Dr. King riding an integrated bus in

Montgomery in 1956.

Page 8: Taking on Segregation

Martin Luther King and the SCLC• SNCC

– Formed to involve college students in the civil rights movement

– Sit-Ins• Often provoked

angry whites• Won sympathy for

protestors

Page 9: Taking on Segregation

The Triumphs of a Crusade

Section 29-2pp. 916-922

Page 10: Taking on Segregation

Riding for Freedom • Freedom Riders

(1961)– Rode buses to protest

segregation – RFK and JFK sent 400

US marshals to protect riders

– Segregation banned in travel facilities

Page 11: Taking on Segregation

Standing Firm • James Meredith

– Gov. refused to let him enter Univ. of Miss.

– JFK sent US marshals to let him in

Page 12: Taking on Segregation

Standing Firm • The Birmingham

Campaign– Protestors viciously

attacked by police– Milestones

• Poor blacks join demand for equality

• Moderate whites in north and south begin supporting desegregation

Page 13: Taking on Segregation

Marching to Washington• March in D.C.

(1963)– 250,000 demand

immediate passage of civil rights bill

– “I Have a Dream” Speech

– Civil Rights Act passed in 1964

Page 14: Taking on Segregation

Fighting for Voting Rights• Freedom Summer

– Student volunteers register voters Mississippi

– Led to violence and murder

• 24th Amendment: Banned poll tax

Page 15: Taking on Segregation

Fighting for Voting Rights• Voting Rights Act of 1965

– Eliminated literacy tests– Allowed federal examiners to register

voters