A Collaborative work by: Airen Lowenstein, Brendan White, Kai Chen.

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Presentation transcript:

A Collaborative work by: Airen Lowenstein, Brendan White, Kai Chen.

Tennessee Tornado: Wilma Golden Rudolph

 Won the 100meters and the 200metes and qualified for the American Olympic Team and became the youngest member at age 16.

 1956 Olympics  Won bronze in the women's 400x4 relay.

 Won the 100meters and the 200meters  Anchored the U.S women’s 400x4 relay team to victory despite a bad baton pass.

 Moscow  Equaled her previous world record for the 100meters  Again anchored the American relay team to victory

 Set a new Olympic record in the 200meters of 22.9seconds.  Tied the world record of 11.3 seconds in the 100meter semifinals.  400x4 relay, 44.5 seconds a new Olympic Record in the semifinals  Broke world record in the 100meter finals with 11.0 seconds

 Became the first American Woman to win three gold medals in one Olympics  Voted into the Black Athletes Hall of Fame in 1973  Voted into the National Track and Field Hall of Fame in 1974

200meter finish with Wilma Rudolph in first place in the Rome Olympics Rudolph holding her three gold medals won in the Rome Olympics 400meter finish in Rome

March on Washington

 For 22 years A. Phillip Randolph dreamt of a large march on Washington D.C.  On August 28 th, 1963, it came true with over two hundred thousand people coming.  One obstacle the organizers had to face was a bomb threat to the Washington Monument and the Lincoln Memorial. When police checked it out, nothing was there.

 In the morning of the march, American Nazi Party leader ordered thousands of people to protest against the marchers.  Unfortunately for him, only around a couple hundred came which looked tiny compared to the 200,000 some civil right protesters.  The police wouldn’t let his group demonstrate and he said, “I am ashamed of my race.”

 None of the people knew about the bomb threat or were aware of the Nazis.  When the leaders were late to lead the people from the Washington Monument to the Lincoln Memorial, they did it themselves.  The musical performances by Bob Dylan and Mahalia Jackson and the speeches from Martin Luther King Jr. and other people in the Big Six made it an entertaining and inspirational day.

Martin Luther King Jr. Death

Before King’s Death Martin Luther King Jr. was threatened many times before his actual death. He said he would not live long He was in Memphis Tennessee for a garbage man protest.

 April 4 th, 1968 King was shot on his hotel balcony in Memphis Tennessee.  James Earl Ray was convicted of his murder.  Martin Luther was so important and well respected that Edward Kennedy sent a plane to carry his body home.  The shot rang out at 6:01 pm on April 4 th  King’s funeral was huge. 800 family members came from all over. The president came to his funeral at Ebenezer Baptist Church.  Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was buried on April 9 th, his burial was all over.

The reaction of his death At least 110 cities experienced violence and destruction. Around 50 million dollars were paid in the destruction. 39 people died, and 34 of them were white. Schools were closed for days, and workers took time off. In outrage of his murder, many blacks took the streets across the country in massive riots. On April 13 th 13,000 African Americans workers went on strike. 50,000 people crowed the church he was being buried at. The public was outraged by this assassination.

Interesting Facts No one really knows who the actual murder was. James Earl Ray was just convicted. There is no physical evidence that James Ray did it. King was in his hotel room, about to go down stairs with his friends, when king said he would be down in a moment. When his friends were going out the door, king said to his musician friend to play “Precious Lord Take My Hand”. Seconds later he was killed. Kings family does not think James Earl Ray did it. Minutes after the shot was heard people rushed into his room and pointed to where the shot came from. Unfortunately they pointed in all different directions.

The people pointing to where they thought they heard the shot come from The riots, because of his death A picture of Martin Luther King