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The Struggle Intensifies The Civil Rights Movement 21.3
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The Struggle Intensifies

Dec 30, 2015

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The Struggle Intensifies. The Civil Rights Movement 21.3. Sit-ins Challenge Segregation. CORE created the sit-in, a technique in which a group of CORE members simply sat down at a segregated lunch counter or other public place If refused service they stayed - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: The Struggle Intensifies

The Struggle IntensifiesThe Struggle Intensifies

The Civil Rights Movement21.3

The Civil Rights Movement21.3

Page 2: The Struggle Intensifies

Sit-ins Challenge Segregation

Sit-ins Challenge Segregation• CORE created the sit-in, a

technique in which a group of CORE members simply sat down at a segregated lunch counter or other public place• If refused service they stayed• Often the targets of racial

violence• Sit-ins worked: forced business

owners to decide between serving protestors or risking disruption and loss of business

• CORE created the sit-in, a technique in which a group of CORE members simply sat down at a segregated lunch counter or other public place• If refused service they stayed• Often the targets of racial

violence• Sit-ins worked: forced business

owners to decide between serving protestors or risking disruption and loss of business

Page 3: The Struggle Intensifies

The Freedom Rides

The Freedom Rides

• Supreme Court expanded its ban on segregation of buses to include bus station waiting rooms and restaurants

• CORE and SNCC organized the “Freedom Rides”• a test to see if the

South would obey the Supreme Court ruling

• Supreme Court expanded its ban on segregation of buses to include bus station waiting rooms and restaurants

• CORE and SNCC organized the “Freedom Rides”• a test to see if the

South would obey the Supreme Court ruling

Page 4: The Struggle Intensifies

Freedom RidesFreedom Rides• Riders met

violence• 13 freedom riders

departed from Washington in 1961

• Anniston, Alabama a heavily armed white mob met the first bus

• More Freedom Riders joined and the movement pushed on

• Riders met violence• 13 freedom riders

departed from Washington in 1961

• Anniston, Alabama a heavily armed white mob met the first bus

• More Freedom Riders joined and the movement pushed on

Page 5: The Struggle Intensifies

National ReactionsNational Reactions• Photographs of the

smoldering bus in Anniston horrified the country

• Violence continued for the riders in Birmingham and Montgomery• Volunteers were arrested• new volunteers replaced

them - also arrested

• Photographs of the smoldering bus in Anniston horrified the country

• Violence continued for the riders in Birmingham and Montgomery• Volunteers were arrested• new volunteers replaced

them - also arrested

Page 6: The Struggle Intensifies

National ReactionsNational Reactions• Attorney General

Robert Kennedy sent federal marshals to protect the Freedom Riders

• RFK pressured the Interstate Commerce Commission to prohibit segregation in all interstate transportation (trains, planes, and buses)

• Attorney General Robert Kennedy sent federal marshals to protect the Freedom Riders

• RFK pressured the Interstate Commerce Commission to prohibit segregation in all interstate transportation (trains, planes, and buses)

Page 7: The Struggle Intensifies

Integration at “Ole Miss”Integration at “Ole Miss”• The NAACP filed a lawsuit

claiming that an AA student’s application was turned down on racial grounds

• The Supreme Court ruled in favor of the NAACP

• Mississippi Governor Ross Barnett personally blocked the way to the admissions office

• The NAACP filed a lawsuit claiming that an AA student’s application was turned down on racial grounds

• The Supreme Court ruled in favor of the NAACP

• Mississippi Governor Ross Barnett personally blocked the way to the admissions office

Page 8: The Struggle Intensifies

Integration at “Ole Miss”Integration at “Ole Miss”• President Kennedy

sent federal marshals to accompany Meredith to campus

• Cowards of angry white protesters destroyed vehicles and violence broke out

• Tear gas used, JFK had to send troops to restore order

• President Kennedy sent federal marshals to accompany Meredith to campus

• Cowards of angry white protesters destroyed vehicles and violence broke out

• Tear gas used, JFK had to send troops to restore order

Page 9: The Struggle Intensifies

Clash in BirminghamClash in Birmingham• The head of the Alabama

Christian Movement for Human Rights, invited Marin Luther King Jr. and the SCLC to visit in 1963

• King called it, “the most segregated city in America”

• King and others planned boycotts in downtown stores and local churches

• Birmingham police commissioner Eugene “Bull” Connor, had MLK jailed

• The head of the Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights, invited Marin Luther King Jr. and the SCLC to visit in 1963

• King called it, “the most segregated city in America”

• King and others planned boycotts in downtown stores and local churches

• Birmingham police commissioner Eugene “Bull” Connor, had MLK jailed

Page 10: The Struggle Intensifies

From Birmingham JailFrom Birmingham Jail• Some white clergy

criticized the campaign as an ill-timed threat to law and order

• King responded from his cell with a “Letter from Birmingham Jail”

• Some white clergy criticized the campaign as an ill-timed threat to law and order

• King responded from his cell with a “Letter from Birmingham Jail”

Page 11: The Struggle Intensifies

From Birmingham

Jail…

From Birmingham

Jail…• When King was released, he organized a march of both adults and young people• Police commissioner

arrested more than 900 young people

• Policed used high-pressured fire hoses, police dogs, and clubs on the protestors

• When King was released, he organized a march of both adults and young people• Police commissioner

arrested more than 900 young people

• Policed used high-pressured fire hoses, police dogs, and clubs on the protestors

Page 12: The Struggle Intensifies

The Nation WatchesThe Nation Watches• The nation watched the violence in

Birmingham with shock• Many moderates began to be sympathetic to

the civil rights movement• Compromise reached:• desegregate the city facilities• fairer hiring practices

• Success in Birmingham was just one example of how nonviolent protest could work

• The nation watched the violence in Birmingham with shock

• Many moderates began to be sympathetic to the civil rights movement

• Compromise reached:• desegregate the city facilities• fairer hiring practices

• Success in Birmingham was just one example of how nonviolent protest could work