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The Civil Rights Movement
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The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

Jan 21, 2016

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Page 1: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

The Civil Rights Movement

Page 2: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

Types of Segregation

• de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law – seen mostly in northern cities

• de jure segregation: racial segregation established by law – Jim Crow laws in the South

Page 3: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

Plessy v. Ferguson

• 1896, Supreme Court case that established the “separate but equal” doctrine

Page 4: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

Thurgood Marshall

• Civil Rights lawyer

• Later became the first African-American Supreme Court Justice

Page 5: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas

• 1954, Supreme Court case which ruled that “separate, but equal” education for black and white students was unconstitutional

Page 6: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

Little Rock Nine

• Nine black students went to Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas as a part of integration

• Students were met with angry students and parents protesting their arrival

Page 7: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.
Page 8: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.
Page 9: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

Rosa Parks• 1955, she refused

to give up her seat on a bus in Montgomery, Alabama and was arrested

• This started the Montgomery Bus Boycott

Page 10: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

Martin Luther King, Jr. • Minister who

emerged as the leader of the Civil Rights Movement

• Encouraged followers to use non-violent protests and acts of civil disobedience

Page 11: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC)

• Formed in 1957 by MLK and other leaders to work for civil rights through non-violent means

Page 12: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC):

• Coordinated sit-ins and other protests to give young blacks a larger role in the Civil Rights Movement

• Started by Stokely Carmichael

Page 13: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

The Greensboro Four

• Four college students in North Carolina refused to move from a lunch counter in protest over segregation

• Influenced other college students to protest

Page 14: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

The Greensboro Four

Page 15: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

Sit-ins

Page 16: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

Civil Rights Movement Part II

Page 17: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

Civil Rights Act of 1964

• Passed by President Johnson

• Banned discrimination on basis of race, sex, national origin, or religion in public places and most workplaces

Page 18: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

Freedom Riders• Civil Rights activists who rode buses

through the South to challenge segregation in 1964

• Made up of mostly college students

• Became known as “Freedom Summer”

Page 19: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

Voting Rights Act of 1965

• Passed by President Johnson

• Made registering to vote easier for African-Americans

• Eliminated discriminatory literacy tests

• Authorized Federal examiners to enroll voters who were denied at the local level

Page 20: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.
Page 21: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

James Meredith

• Tried to enroll at the University of Mississippi

• Kennedy sent in federal troops to ensure his enrollment

Page 22: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

Selma Campaign

• 1965, Civil Rights activists marched 50 miles from Selma, Alabama to Montgomery, Alabama

• Alabama police violently halted the first march

• Second march proved to be successful

Page 23: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.
Page 24: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

Malcolm X• Sought to end

segregation by urging African Americans to become less dependent of whites

• Resisted MLK’s notion of Civil Disobedience

Page 25: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

Nation of Islam

• AKA, the Black Muslims

• Founded by Elijah Muhammad

• Sought to promote black separation along with the Muslim faith

Page 26: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

Stokely Carmichael

• Promoted “Black Power”

• Encouraged African-Americans to take pride in “being black” and take an active role in political and social leadership

Page 27: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

Black Panthers

• Militant African-American political organization

• Formed by Huey Newton and Bobby Seale

• Sought to fight police brutality and the use of violence in order to protect African-Americans

Page 28: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

Huey Newton Bobby Seale

Page 29: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

The Kerner Commission

• Warned that America was moving towards two separate societies

• Said whites were to blame for ignoring needs of African Americans

• Changes were needed to avoid a system of apartheid

Page 30: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.

April 4, 1968

• Martin Luther King, Jr. is assassinated outside a Memphis Hotel by James Earl Ray

Page 31: The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.