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THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT
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THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT. Segregation— enforced separation of racial/ethnic groups De jure (by law) segregation – legal segregation through written.

Dec 30, 2015

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Randolph Turner
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Page 1: THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT.  Segregation— enforced separation of racial/ethnic groups  De jure (by law) segregation – legal segregation through written.

THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT

Page 2: THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT.  Segregation— enforced separation of racial/ethnic groups  De jure (by law) segregation – legal segregation through written.

Segregation— enforced separation of racial/ethnic groups

De jure (by law) segregation – legal segregation through written laws

De facto (by custom) segregation – unwritten segregation through customs, housing patterns, employment, and traditions

Important Vocabulary

Page 3: THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT.  Segregation— enforced separation of racial/ethnic groups  De jure (by law) segregation – legal segregation through written.

Civil disobedience— a strategy for causing social change by means of non-violent resistance

Boycott— an organized agreement not to buy or use a certain product in order to exert pressure for change

Important Vocabulary

Page 4: THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT.  Segregation— enforced separation of racial/ethnic groups  De jure (by law) segregation – legal segregation through written.

Brown v. Board of Education (1954)

Page 5: THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT.  Segregation— enforced separation of racial/ethnic groups  De jure (by law) segregation – legal segregation through written.

Emmett Till (August 1955)

Start at 11:00 if lacking time

Page 6: THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT.  Segregation— enforced separation of racial/ethnic groups  De jure (by law) segregation – legal segregation through written.

Montgomery Bus Boycott

16-year-old Edwina Johnson & her brother Marshall Arrested for sitting on a bus next to a white man and boy & refusing to move Spent 2 days in jail

Claudette Colvin, teenager A student at Booker T. Washington High Sent to jail for refusing to give up her seat, March 2, 1955 Charged for violating segregation laws, assault, battery,

resisting arrest

--Before Rosa Parks

Mary Louise Smith, 18 Arrested when she refused to move to the back

of the bus After being asked 3 times by the bus driver she

said, “I am not going to move out of my seat. I am not going to move anywhere. I got the privilege to sit here like anybody else does.”

Pleaded guilty; fined $5

TWO MONTHS LATER ON DECEMBER 1, 1955…

Page 7: THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT.  Segregation— enforced separation of racial/ethnic groups  De jure (by law) segregation – legal segregation through written.

Rosa Parks Won’t Give Up Seat—Dec. 1, 1955

“People always say that I didn't give up my seat because I was tired,” Rosa Parks wrote in her autobiography, “but that isn't true. I was not tired physically, or no more tired than I usually was at the end of a working day. I was not old, although some people have an image of me as being old then. I was forty-two. No, the only tired I was, was tired of giving in.”

Rosa Parks Booked for Arrest

Page 8: THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT.  Segregation— enforced separation of racial/ethnic groups  De jure (by law) segregation – legal segregation through written.

When she later explained her action she said, "I thought of Emmett Till

and I just couldn't go back."

Page 9: THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT.  Segregation— enforced separation of racial/ethnic groups  De jure (by law) segregation – legal segregation through written.

• Montgomery blacks decided to not ride the city buses until the segregation law changed

• People walked long distances• Carpools were set up• Boycott lasted 381 days!

Page 10: THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT.  Segregation— enforced separation of racial/ethnic groups  De jure (by law) segregation – legal segregation through written.

Martin Luther King Emerges as Leader• 26 years old• New minister at Dexter Avenue

Baptist church

Page 11: THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT.  Segregation— enforced separation of racial/ethnic groups  De jure (by law) segregation – legal segregation through written.

MLK Encouraged Non-Violent Resistance

Non-Violent Resistance Involved:a) Using moral arguments to change the minds of the oppressorsb) Non-cooperation with unjust lawsc) Marches & demonstrations to cause a creative tension to force action

Inspired by Gandhi

Page 12: THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT.  Segregation— enforced separation of racial/ethnic groups  De jure (by law) segregation – legal segregation through written.

Success!

• Federal court rules law unconstitutional

• Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) created to continue the fight

26:00-35:00 Boycott[44:30-48:00]48:00--55:00 Boycott

• Bus company lost a great deal of money