1. Chapter 31: The Ordeal of Liberalism 2. John Kennedy John Kennedy was the son of the wealthy and powerful former American ambassador to Britain, Joseph P. Kennedy The…
Slide 1The Road to Brown The Supreme Court and Desegregation from Plessy to Brown and Beyond Slide 2 Plessy v Ferguson (1896) Does not use the phrase separate but equal.…
Slide 1Civil Rights 1950 - 1968 Slide 2 Where did legal segregation come from? Plessy v. Ferguson The state of Louisiana enacted a law that required separate railway cars…
Slide 1Chapter 18 Section 1 Slide 2 Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) The Supreme Court's decision in the case of Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) had declared segregation to be constitutional…
Slide 1June 2010 2 Study Source B and use your own knowledge. Why was this photograph published in US newspapers? Use details of the photograph and your own knowledge to…
1.Section 1 Early Demands for Equality • Describe efforts to end segregation in the 1940s and 1950s. • Explain the importance of Brown v. Board of Education. • Describe…
1. Civil Rights Movement. 1954-1968. Origins of the movement: Plessy v. Ferguson-1896. This ruling confirmed separation. “ but equal.” discrimination. Most shameful ruling…
1. Social Media Contest • Teaching Florida https://twitter.com/TeachingFlorida @TeachingFlorida #Civil War Session 1 • YouTube video https://www.youtube.com/user/FloridaHumanities…
Slide 1The Civil Rights Movement Slide 2 How did African Americans challenge segregation after World War II? African Americans were still treated as second-class citizens…