By Ethan Rutter.  JFk was in the process of running for office as the civil rights movement began.  And after he got elected the movement was still.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Rosa Parks: Mother of the Civil Rights Movement
Advertisements

Civil Rights Leader Rosa Parks
Rosa Park By Nafisa Rahman.
Rosa Parks Presented by: Andrew Carter
Rosa Parks By: Madina Boucher.
Jeopardy Martin L. King Cause and Effect Reading Skills Rosa Parks FCAT Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy.
Civil Rights Movement. Civil Rights Movement Photos.
Rosa Parks (page 168).  Feb. 13, Oct. 25, 2005  Born in Tuskegee, Alabama  Known as the “mother of the modern Civil Rights Movement.”  In 1955,
Civil Rights.
The book starts in Montgomery, Alabama, in the time of the Jim Crow laws and segregation. The first chapter in the book talks about Jo Ann Robinson,
Civil Rights Movement in Texas
Daring to Dream: Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. A presentation for grades K through 2 by the Rice University Black Student Association and Office of Public.
Answers to Civil Rights Movement Worksheet
Montgomery Bus Boycott Leaving Cert History: Case Study.
CHAPTER 1 - Chapter 1: The Beginning of Rosa Parks.
The Civil Rights Movement
Rosa Parks: The Woman Who Changed a Nation By Paulina Baymon.
Who is Rosa Parks Letting us get 1 step closer to Freedom BY Aidan, Chania, Nimo, Kelsea. L.
Rosa Parks and the Montgomery Bus Boycott,
Rosa Parks By: Karianne Castillo & Olivia Perry & Tashauna Newby.
African American Struggle for Equality: A Civil Rights Hero Name
Outcomes & Objectives Objectives To understand the causes and the consequences of Rosa Parks’ decision not to give her seat up on a bus for a white man.
Rosa Parks: Mother of the Civil Rights Movement
Civil Rights Movement. Civil Rights Starting with Brown vs B of E, a string of events occurred that raised awareness for the movement It was not easy.
Rosa Parks By Rhea. Introduction Rosa Parks was a civil rights activist. She is best known for the Montgomery Bus boycott.
The Arrest Records of Rosa Parks
Civil Rights Leader Rosa Parks Copyright 2014 Solène Gousselin.
Rosa Parks: Mother of the Civil Rights Movement. Who was Rosa Parks? Rosa Parks was born on February 4, 1913, in Tuskegee, Alabama to James McCauley and.
Who is this?. Rosa Parks Seamstress in Montgomery, Alabama Dec. 1, 1955—refused to give up her seat on a bus to a white passenger Arrested by the police.
Civil Rights Movement. Civil Rights Starting with Brown vs B of E, a string of events occurred that raised awareness for the movement It was not easy.
By: Annie Funk.  The Civil Rights Movement was a non-violent protest for civil rights.  Everything in the south was segregated and I mean everything.
Rosa Parks “The First lady Of The Civil Rights movement”
Civil rights movement in America Civil Rights Movement in the United States, political, legal, and social struggle by black Americans to gain full citizenship.
 By: LeAnn Schannep Student Sample. By: Ava, Joey, Mandi and Tomeka.
BY TinsleyN.Thompon.  She got on a bus and set in the front were the white people were post to set and they said if she didn’t move they would throw.
Joel Palacios-Lara U.S history. The Cause On the 1st of December 1955, Mrs. Rosa Parks, an African-American seamstress, was arrested in Montgomery, Alabama.
Alex Elezovic. Timeline Supreme court declares school segregation in Topeka, Kansas 1955-Rosa parks refuses to give up her seat to a white person.
Rosa Parks. Was an African-American civil rights activist Called the mother of the freedom movement She got on the bus in Montgomery and sat in the front.
The Montgomery Bus Boycott Lesson starter: Write down what you know about Rosa Parks and the Montgomery Bus Boycott.
Rosa Parks. Background Rosa parks was born in Tuskegee, Alabama, U.S. On February 4,1913. James McCauley and Leona Edwards are her parents. She was African-American,
Black History. Going to Jail   Rosa Parks was a modest seamstress on her way home from work when she refused to give up her seat on a bus in Montgomery,
The Great Life of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. By Sabrina and Renata.
Mother of the Civil Rights Movement
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 African Americans... Then & Now ! Is the civil rights movement still important today?
Rosa Parks was born on February 4, She grew up in Pine Level, Alabama, right outside of Montgomery. In the South, Jim Crowe laws segregated African.
CIVIL RIGHTS. GROUPS INVOLVED IN CIVIL RIGHTS NAACP - (National Association for the Advancement of Coloured People) UNIA - (Universal Negro Improvement.
Rosa Parks Shahrukh Khan. Who She Was Rosa Parks was an African American women who had to deal with both of the struggles of being colored and inferior.
By: Maggie Decker. The civil rights activists happened because some people thought that African Americans should still be slaves. Some thought that black.
Biography of Rosa L. Parks
Presented by Ryan Cutaneo Bedminster School, NJ. The woman who stood up for her and others’ civil rights. Time 100- One of Time Magazine’s 100 most influential.
SS8H11: The student will evaluate the role of Georgia in the modern civil rights movement. Civil Rights Movement.
Chapter 9 A Century of Change Lesson 2: Equal Rights.
Black History Month “In giving rights to others which belong to them, we give rights to ourselves and to our country” -John F. Kennedy.
Martin Luther King Jr. was born on January 15, 1929 in Atlanta Georgia. Martin Luther King Jr. attended Booker T. Washington High School where he was.
Graphic Organizer 8.1B and 8.1C- Civil Rights Civil Rights Movement Leaders: Martin Luther King Jr. Ms. Rosa Parks Malcolm Little aka Malcom.
CIVIL RIGHTS FIGHTING FOR EQUALITY Mrs. Bryant’s 5 th Grade Georgia Standards WJIS.
Rosa Parks GONNEAU Marie-Julie FAIT-DEWEERDT Méline April 2015.
1 2018/5/21 Rosa Parks By: Nazareth Díaz Vega, 3ºC.
The Life of Rosa Parks By: Alli Ferrara EDCI 270 Web 2.0 Project.
Warm-up: “The ultimate tragedy is not the oppression and cruelty by the bad people but the silence over that by the good people.” Explain what Martin Luther.
Civil Rights Movement Civil rights: right to vote, right to equal treatment, right to speak out.
Civil Rights Movement Civil rights: right to vote, right to equal treatment, right to speak out.
The Civil Rights Movement
Civil Rights Movement Civil rights: right to vote, right to equal treatment, right to speak out.
Civil Rights Fighting For Equality
Mother of the Civil Rights Movement
Civil Rights Leader Rosa Parks
Presentation transcript:

By Ethan Rutter

 JFk was in the process of running for office as the civil rights movement began.  And after he got elected the movement was still going on  He was active in helping the civil rights movement after he was elected.

 This act was enacted on July 2, 1964  The act made it so that all forms of discrimination against African Americans and women was illegal  This allowed African Americans the ability to eat in the same restaurants as others, stay in the same hotels and use other establishments that they were not allowed into before.

 Before Kennedy was elected he actually voted against a civil rights act proposed by Eisenhower.  By doing this Kennedy did not hurt his chances of becoming the democratic candidate and he eventually defeated Nixon in 1960 and became president.

By RJ Kanson

The Black Panthers were formed in California in 1966 Believed the non-violent protests of Martin Luther King had failed and that any other civil rights movement would take too long for them to gain their rights. The two original founders were Huey Newton and Bobby Seal Samuel L. Jackson was a Black Panther

J. Edgar Hoover said that the Black Panthers were “the greatest threat to the internal security of the country.” FBI used insider spies to keep track of the Black Panthers leaders which would lead to their arrests FBI would eventually take down the Black Panthers

The Black Panthers were violent but also did things for the community They created a Free Food Program to feed the poor They also started an Intercommunal Youth Band to create community pride

By Hailey Neluna

___________________________________________________________ She was born on February 4, 1913 in Tuskegee Alabama She died on October 24, 2005 in Detroit Michigan Suffered from poor health and chronic tonsillitis as a child Was part of the 7% of African Americans who received a high school diploma Married Raymond Parks in 1932

Rosa Parks was a Civil Rights Activist. She worked at Montgomery Fair department store, and after a long day at work she paid bus fare and took a seat in the back of the bus. Which was known as the “colored” section. It was a Thursday, December 1 st, As they bus traveled on, the reserved seats for the whites quickly filled up. When they reached the entrance of the Empire Theater, a lot of whites boarded the bus. "The driver wanted us to stand up, the four of us. We didn't move at the beginning, but he says, 'Let me have these seats.' And the other three people moved, but I didn't,” says Rosa. Blake, the bus driver, told her that he was _______________________ going to call the police and she said that he “may do that”. She ended up being arrested, and that started the Montgomery Bus Boycott and no blacks went on the busses. “People always say that I didn't give up my seat because I was tired, but that isn't true. I was not tired physically, or no more tired than I usually was at the end of a working day. I was not old, although some people have an image of me as being old then. I was forty-two. No, the only tired I was, was tired of giving in.”

A. Dunwoody