Objectives Describe efforts to end segregation in the 1940s and 1950s.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 18 Section 1.
Advertisements

Objectives Describe efforts to end segregation in the 1940s and 1950s.
The Civil Rights Movement.
 Describe efforts to end segregation in the 40’s and 50’s  Explain the importance of Brown v. BOE  Describe the controversy over school segregation.
The Civil Rights Movement 1954 – 1968 Section 1 : The Movement Begins (pgs. 622 – 629). Who is this woman ? Why is this man impt ?
Chapter 14 The Civil Rights Movement 1945– 1975 Who is this woman ? Why is this man impt ?
Paperwork Stuff Does anyone still need to take the Chapter 13 test? HW check – 14-1 Reading Notes.
Fighting Segregation 28-1 The Main Idea In the mid-1900s, the civil rights movement began to make major progress in correcting the national problem of.
Vocabulary Words and Phrases of the Civil Rights Movement
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Civil Rights in the 1940s–1950s.
The Civil Rights Movement
Exploring American History Unit IX- Postwar America Chapter 28 – Section 1 The Civil Rights Movement Takes Shape.
Taking on Segregation Chapter 21, Section 1 Notes.
The Modern Civil Rights Movement Chapter 28 Section 2.
Civil Rights Movement Chapter 22. Brown vs. Board of Education 1951 – Linda Brown’s parents sued BOE of Topeka For not allowing Linda to attend an all-white.
The Civil Rights Movement
The civil Rights Movement
28.1 Fighting Segregation. Focus Your Thoughts... What are ‘civil rights’? Give examples. The Supreme Court case Brown v the Board of Education replaced.
The Civil Rights Movement
Bellringer Question: How did you feel when you were being discriminated against? If you had a black card, how would you have felt if you had been in your.
The Civil Rights Movement Page 916 Chapter
March 13, Unit VIII Introduction: Civil Rights Movement Notes (part 1) The Movement Begins 3. Video Clip: Brown vs. Board of Education.
The Civil Rights Movement
African Americans were still treated as second- class citizens after World War II. Their heroic effort to attain racial equality is known as the civil.
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 will be able to name the major civil rights legislation of the late 1940s and 1950s.
Introduction to Civil Rights Movement Explain, describe and identify key events in the Civil Rights Movement.
CHAPTER 29, SECTION 1 THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT BEGINS.
18.1 The Movement Begins. Lesson Objectives 1. The students will be able to explain the difference between de facto segregation and de jure segregation.
Chapter Twenty-Eight The Civil Rights Movement, 1945–1966.
Chapter 14 The Civil Rights Movement. “de jure” segregation in the South separate but equal segregation in schools, hospitals, transportation, restaurants,
Early demands for equality Chapter 14, section 1.
The 1950s Civil Rights Movement. Since the end of the Civil War, African Americans had been waging a movement to finally gain equality in America – civil.
Explain how and why African Americans and other supporters of civil rights challenged segregation in the United States after World War II.
Warm-up: What was the court’s decision in the Plessy vs. Ferguson in 1896? What case overthrew that decision in Brown vs. Board case in 1954?
Civil Rights Vocab Chapter 18. De Jure Segregation Segregation based on the law Practiced in the South (Jim Crow Laws)
Origins of the Civil Rights movement
Civil Rights in the 1940s–1950s.
Early Demands for equality
Civil Rights Movement Chapter 23 Notes.
Objectives Describe efforts to end segregation in the 1940s and 1950s.
Civil Rights 1960’s Chapter 27.
Section 1 Chapter 14 Major Question, “ How did African Americans Challenge Segregation After WWII?”
The Supreme Court Says…
Chapter 21 Section 1: Taking on Segregation
Ch. 18 Sec. 1 Early CRM in 1940s & 1950s Essential Question: What events in the 1940s & 1950s led to the start of the 1960s Civil Rights Movement?
Early Demands for Equality
The Civil Rights Movement Begins
Chapter 29.1 Civil Rights in the 1960s.
#44 Chapter 21 Civil Rights Section 1 Taking on Segregation
What did the Civil Rights Act of 1875 do?
Warm-up: In a brief paragraph discuss--- What are civil rights?
Civil Rights Lecture 1.
Segregation and Civil Right Movement
Objectives Describe efforts to end segregation in the 1940s and 1950s.
Beginnings of the Civil Rights Movement
Civil Rights in the 1940s–1960s.
Early Civil Rights Movement
The Civil Rights Movement PART 1 OF —1975
Objectives Describe efforts to end segregation in the 1940s and 1950s.
Objectives Describe efforts to end segregation in the 1940s and 1950s.
Objectives Describe efforts to end segregation in the 1940s and 1950s.
Ch. 20 the Civil Rights Movement
Civil Rights Era & JFK  LBJ ( )
Opening Assignment If you faced the threat of violent retaliation by the government or other citizens would you peacefully protest for a cause?
The Civil Rights Movement
De Jure Segregation / De Facto Segregation
Civil Rights Movement.
Objectives Describe efforts to end segregation in the 1940s and 1950s.
African-American Civil Rights Movement
Presentation transcript:

Objectives Describe efforts to end segregation in the 1940s and 1950s. Explain the importance of Brown v. Board of Education. Describe the controversy over school desegregation in Little Rock, Arkansas. Discuss the Montgomery bus boycott and its impact.

Terms and People de jure segregation − segregation that is imposed by law de facto segregation − segregation by unwritten custom or tradition Thurgood Marshall − African American lawyer who led the legal team that challenged segregation in the courts; later named a Supreme Court justice

Terms and People (continued) Earl Warren – Supreme Court Chief Justice who wrote the decision that ended segregation in public schools Civil Rights Act of 1957 − law that established a federal Civil Rights Commission Rosa Parks − African American woman arrested in Montgomery, Alabama, for refusing to give up her bus seat to a white person, leading to a prolonged bus boycott

Terms and People (continued) Montgomery bus boycott − a 1955-1956 protest by African Americans in Montgomery, Alabama, against racial segregation in the bus system Martin Luther King, Jr. − Baptist preacher and civil rights leader who advocated nonviolent protest against segregation

How did African Americans challenge segregation after World War II? African Americans were still treated as second-class citizens after World War II. Their heroic effort to attain racial equality is known as the civil rights movement. They took their battle to the street, in the form of peaceful protests, held boycotts, and turned to the courts for a legal guarantee of basic rights.

de jure segregation de facto segregation Despite their service in World War II, segregation at home was still the rule for African Americans. de jure segregation de facto segregation in the South separate but equal segregation in schools, hospitals, transportation, restaurants, cemeteries, and beaches in the North discrimination in housing discrimination in employment only low-paying jobs were available

Discrimination in the defense industries was banned in 1941. Truman desegregated the military in 1948. Jackie Robinson became the first African American to play major league baseball. CORE was created to end racial injustice. World War II set the stage for the rise of the modern civil rights movement.

African American veterans were unwilling to accept discrimination at home after risking their lives overseas. HSUS p. 917 8

In 1954, many of the nation’s school systems were segregated. The NAACP decided to challenge school segregation in the federal courts. African American attorney Thurgood Marshall led the NAACP legal team in Brown v. Board of Education. HSUS p. 918

Written by Chief Justice Earl Warren, the Brown v Written by Chief Justice Earl Warren, the Brown v. Board of Education decision said: Segregated public education violated the Fourteenth Amendment. “Separate but equal” had no place in public education.

The Brown v. Board of Education ruling was significant and controversial. In a second decision, Brown II, the courts urged implementation of the decision “with all deliberate speed” across the nation. About 100 white Southern members of Congress opposed the decision; in 1956 they endorsed “The Southern Manifesto” to lawfully oppose Brown. 11

The Brown decision also met resistance on the local and state level. In Little Rock, Arkansas, when nine African American students tried to enter Central High, the governor had the National Guard stop them. President Eisenhower had to send in troops to enforce the Brown decision. Elizabeth Eckford tries to enter Central High.

Some civil rights activists took direct action. In Montgomery, Alabama, Rosa Parks was arrested for refusing to give up her bus seat to a white person. This sparked a boycott to integrate public transportation. The black community walked or carpooled to work rather than take public transportation. The Montgomery bus boycott launched the modern civil rights movement. 13

Martin Luther King, Jr.’s inspiring speech at a boycott meeting propelled him into the leadership of the nonviolent civil rights movement. The black community continued its bus boycott for more than a year despite threats and violence. MS clip art In 1956, the Supreme Court ruled that segregated busing was unconstitutional and the boycott ended. Martin Luther King, Jr.

It proved that they could work together and demand change. It inspired King and Ralph Abernathy, another Montgomery minister, to establish the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) to continue the nonviolent struggle for civil rights. The bus boycott was a tremendous and exciting victory for African Americans. But even with these victories, discrimination and segregation remained widespread. 15

Section Review QuickTake Quiz Know It, Show It Quiz 16