BLACK CIVIL RIGHTS CHALLENGING JIM CROW 1954 Brown v Board of Education.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Plessy v. Ferguson Sued the train company and lost.
Advertisements

Brown v. Board of Education
The Players Vocabulary Plessey v. Ferguson Brown v.
By: Kaitlyn Cramer. Immediately after the Civil War, segregation began to rise in the South.
Plessy v. Ferguson Supreme Court Case 1896 “ Separate But Equal ” Power point created by Robert L. Martinez Primary Content: The Americans.
Brown v. Board of Education U. S. Supreme Court Decision.
Truman signs Executive Order 9981, which states, "It is hereby declared to be the policy of the President that there shall be equality of treatment and.
Legal Background of Civil Rights. Equal Protection Clause 14 th Amendment of the Constitution (1868)  “no state shall make or enforce any law which shall.
The Civil Rights Movement. Introduction to the Civil Rights Movement After the Civil War , the federal government made strides toward equality.
Civil Rights.
Famous Civil Rights Cases and Events. Plessy vs. Ferguson Case 1892, Homer Plessy was jailed for sitting in the "White" car of the East Louisiana Railroad.
CQ: What was the best way to stop discrimination in Alabama during the 1950s and 1960s? Lesson Focus Question: Was passing new laws or going to court an.
How did school become integrated instead of continuing to be segregated? Most people believe school integration began with a famous case called “Brown.
How did the Civil Rights Movement campaign against segregation in schools? L/O – To understand the key features of Brown v Topeka and to evaluate the significance.
 Oliver Brown was an African American railroad worker who had a daughter. She wanted to go to school but the school closest to them was for only white.
Brown vs. The Board of Education
Brown Vs. Board of Education By: Damon Mckie. How it began!!!! African American parents began to challenge racial segregation in public education as early.
Exploring American History Unit IX- Postwar America Chapter 28 – Section 1 The Civil Rights Movement Takes Shape.
28.1 Fighting Segregation. Focus Your Thoughts... What are ‘civil rights’? Give examples. The Supreme Court case Brown v the Board of Education replaced.
Do Now 1)What was Jim Crow? 2) What does "separate but equal" mean?
A Supreme Court Ruling Brown vs. Board of Education Pg. 372.
QOD 2/25 Why was the Brown v. Board of Education supreme court case so monumental in United States history?
Voting Rights.
Plessy v. Ferguson Big Papi Vinny. In 1892, Homer Plessy took a seat in the “whites only” car of a train and refused to move. He was arrested, and convicted.
4 Major Court Cases. Roe v. Wade Year: 1973 Roe: For women’s rights Wade: Defense of Texas statute Issue: Women’s right over her own body. – Amendments:
The Civil Rights Era. Segregation The isolation of a race, class, or group.
Plessy v. Ferguson 1896  In 1890, the Louisiana state legislature passed the “Separate Car Act,” which required separate accommodations for blacks and.
The Civil Rights Era HC #1: Challenging Jim Crow - Brown v. Board of Education.
Laws & Court Cases Vocabulary Terms Civil Rights Leaders Civil Rights Leaders Take a Chance.
Brown vs. Board of Education By Alex Labruzzo. What is Brown vs. Board of Education? In 1950 the Topeka NAACP, led by McKinley Burnett, set out to organize.
Background Personalities in the Case ArgumentsThe Facts Constitutional Precedents The Aftermath $200 $400 $600 $800 $200 $400 $600 $800 $200 $400 $600.
The Civil Rights Movement Education. Aims: Examine how the Civil Rights campaign led to changes in education.
Brown v board of education By: Mr. Pirring. Attention Getter Imagine if you were isolated for something as simple as your hair color.
Desegregating Schools. NAACP The NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People) played a crucial role in desegregating schools. This.
Civil Rights By T.J.M.. Education Equality (Not) During the 1950s and before, African American children and White children could not attend the same schools.
The Civil Rights Movement A look at the laws and rulings that helped bring more equality.
Brown v. Board of Education Using Dolls to Fight for Civil Rights.
Origins of the Civil Rights Movement Objective: Identify factors that contributed to the Civil Rights Movement; Explain the significance of Brown v. Board.
 Brown v. Topeka Board of Education (1961).   Questions to Consider  Cases before Brown  Events Leading up to the Lawsuit  School Segregation Map.
■ Essential Question: – What were the significant events in the history of African Americans before the civil rights movement? ■ CPUSH Agenda for Unit.
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.
“THE BROWN DECISION” By Christina Adams. 7 year old Linda Brown was not permitted to attend an all white school near her home. Her family sued and lost.
FIGHTING SEGREGATION Ch 18 sec 1 I. The Civil Rights Movement Prior to 1954 The movement begins with abolitionists in the colonial period. Opposition.
CIVIL RIGHTS FIGHTING FOR EQUALITY Mrs. Bryant’s 5 th Grade Georgia Standards WJIS.
Chapter 28 Our Enduring Constitution
Civil Rights Movement.
The Modern Civil Rights Movement ( )
Plessy v. Ferguson Supreme Court Case 1896
How was legal segregation overcome
The Courts begin to dismantle segregation
Civil Rights Movement Chapter 21.
What were Jim Crow Laws? Give an example.
Discrimination unfair treatment of a person or group on the basis of prejudice African Americans was a group that was discriminated against in the 1900s.
Origins of the Civil Rights Movement
Origins of the Civil Rights Movement
The Civil Rights Movement
The Civil Rights Movement
Read pages 686 – 687 and the handout, “Nullifying the Separate but Equal Principle Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas, 1954” answering … (1)
November 8, 2018 Modern Issues in the U.S. Agenda:
Brown vs. Board of Education
“We Shall Overcome” Objectives:
Brown vs board of Education 1954
The Civil Rights Movement
National Memorial for Peace and Justice
The Modern Civil Rights Movement ( )
The Civil Rights Movement Begins
Essential Question: What were the significant events in the history of African Americans before the civil rights movement?
Brown v. Board of Education
Post Civil War Tensions
Brown v. Board of Education (1954) 347 U.S. 483
Presentation transcript:

BLACK CIVIL RIGHTS CHALLENGING JIM CROW 1954 Brown v Board of Education

BLACK CIVIL RIGHTS OBJECTIVES This lesson you will learn about: –A way in which blacks were discriminated against. –A method used by blacks to gain Civil Rights. –The US system of Government.

BLACK CIVIL RIGHTS OUTCOMES At the end of the lesson you will have: –Recapped yesterday’s work. –Notes about how the US Govt functions. –Notes about school segregation. –Seen an awesome animation! –Notes about why school segregation ended. –You will be able to: Explain why the Supreme Court ruled in favour of Linda Brown.

BLACK CIVIL RIGHTS TASK: JIM CROW RECAP Imagine you are a Black girl from New York who has gone to visit her relations in Mississippi. What things would you notice about Southern society that were different from the North? –Describe three specific things that are different, using details.

BLACK CIVIL RIGHTS USA Government Unlike in NZ, not all parts of the USA have the same laws. States can make their own laws about most things – such as gambling. The Federal Govt controls certain things like defence and foreign policy. The Federal Govt also makes sure the Constitution is being followed.

BLACK CIVIL RIGHTS Federal ExecutiveState Executive

BLACK CIVIL RIGHTS TASK: US GOVT Turn to and refer to pg 17. Answer these questions: –What are the four main parts of the Federal Govt? –What is the most important part? –Which part could decide that a state law is against the Constitution?

BLACK CIVIL RIGHTS Linda Brown Linda Brown was an eight year old girl who lived in Topeka, Kansas. Kansas had segregated schools – every day Linda passed a white school on the way to the black school. She had to walk across a dangerous railway line.

BLACK CIVIL RIGHTS

NAACP Help Linda’s father, Oliver Brown hated that the schools were segregated. He got help from the NAACP. Along with 14 other families in Topeka, as part of a nationwide NAACP campaign, Brown took the Topeka Board of Education to court. The Kansas court refused his request to desegregate. Brown and the NAACP appealed to the US Supreme Court.

BLACK CIVIL RIGHTS

TASK: School Segregation School areas in Kansas could choose whether or not to be segregated. Other states in the South had compulsory segregation. Turn to pg 19. Complete the three questions on mapping.

BLACK CIVIL RIGHTS Topeka, Kansas S. Carolina Virginia Delaware

BLACK CIVIL RIGHTS Separate but Equal Jim Crow segregation had always been allowed by the Supreme Court. They allowed segregation on the basis of: “Separate, but Equal” Do you think separate would be equal?

BLACK CIVIL RIGHTS SEPARATE BUT EQUAL? $43.14 per child$98.15 per child Mississippi School Funding

BLACK CIVIL RIGHTS

THURGOOD and WARREN Thurgood Marshall was a lawyer for the NAACP. He argued Mr Brown’s case in front of the Supreme Court. He would later become a member of the Supreme Court himself. Earl Warren was the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. He ruled that the idea of ‘separate but equal’ was wrong and illegal. Schools would have to desegregate. "no State shall... deny to any person... the equal protection of the laws." “To separate them from others of similar age because of their race generates a feeling of inferiority”

BLACK CIVIL RIGHTS THE DOLL TEST Thurgood Marshall told the court about an experiment as part of his case. Hundreds of children, black and white, had been asked to choose between two dolls to play with. One doll was black, one was white. Nearly all choose the white doll. They were then asked which doll was the ‘bad doll’. Nearly all pointed to the black doll.

BLACK CIVIL RIGHTS

TASK: The Decision Read pg 15. Answer these questions: –Why was Linda Brown’s school inferior to the local school? –Why did the case have to go to the Supreme Court? –Why did Justice Warren decide in favour of Brown? !!! These questions might be a bit tricky. Ask me for help if you need it!!!

BLACK CIVIL RIGHTS

TASK: The Reaction Turn to Pg 18 – 19. Read the Five letters to the editor about the Supreme Court Decision (in the pink box). Answer the three questions on pg18 “Magazine study”. Pretend it is 1954, just after the Supreme Court decision. Write a letter to the editor stating how you feel about the decision and why.