The Civil Rights Movement Indicator 8-7.4: Explain the factors that influenced the economic opportunities of African American South Carolinians during.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
SCians enlisted in the military in large numbers; donated/sold land to the federal government for military bases How did SC contribute to World War I?
Advertisements

AGENDA History Log Standard Bullets 8.2 Notes Key Terms History Log: If you were a teen in the 1960s would you have joined the Civil Rights movement?
Objectives Describe efforts to end segregation in the 1940s and 1950s.
The Civil Rights Movement.
The Civil Rights Movement in Virginia Civil Rights – the privileges that you enjoy as a citizen. These include rights such as voting and equal opportunity.
Chapter 20 Section 1 Civil Rights Movement
Taking on Segregation US History (EOC)
The Civil Rights Movement and Political Party Shift and EQ #1: How did African Americans finally achieve Civil Rights in South Carolina? EQ.
Integrated prom How is it that Wilcox High has been having segregated proms all this time? Who in Wilcox county is organizing to have an integrated prom?
THE MODERN CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT Taking a walk With Civil Rights Leaders and established laws for African Americans and Women.
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.
Civil Rights Identify the Plessy v. Ferguson decision? “Separate but equal” facilities were constitutional Racial segregation was legal.
Civil Rights Identify the Plessy v. Ferguson decision? “Separate but equal” facilities were constitutional Racial segregation was legal.
Civil Rights Movement: Eisenhower Years
Lord - Upper Cape Tech School Fighting 4 The Cause Legal Aspects Equality Groups &
Fighting Segregation In the mid-1900s, the civil rights movement began to make major progress in correcting the national problem of racial segregation.
Taking on Segregation Chapter 21, Section 1 Notes.
The Modern Civil Rights Movement Chapter 28 Section 2.
Origins of the Civil Rights Movement
QOD 3/10 QOD: Why did the citizens of Montgomery, Alabama chose a boycott as their method for changing the transportation system of the city?
Demands for Civil Rights
The Civil Rights Movement. Civil Rights: Major Details  Lasted approx  It was a movement that was aimed at outlawing racial discrimination.
Chapter 4.4 The Civil Rights Struggle. Background of the Struggle After the Civil War, African Americans routinely faced discrimination, or unfair treatment.
The Civil Rights Movement Chapter 24. Civil Rights Movement Obtained “equal” rights for African Americans and minorities. Ended segregation. Little Rock.
Chapter 4 Civil rights. The Civil Rights Struggle: After the Civil War, African Americans routinely faced discrimination, or unfair treatment based on.
March 13, Unit VIII Introduction: Civil Rights Movement Notes (part 1) The Movement Begins 3. Video Clip: Brown vs. Board of Education.
CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT. 14 th Amendment Purpose was to make sure that southern states were treating freed slaves equally under the law. Incorporated the.
The Civil Rights Era. Segregation The isolation of a race, class, or group.
THE MODERN CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT Taking a walk With Civil Rights Leaders and established laws for African Americans and Women.
The Civil Rights Movement
Civil Rights In this chapter you will explore how African Americans rose up against the treatment they had endured for decades and demanded civil rights.
The Civil Rights Movement. Types of Segregation de facto segregation: established by practice and custom, not by law –seen mostly in northern cities de.
Unit 10 By: Bennett Huddleston, Andrew Zucker, Mark Carter, and Michael Noteboom.
DEMANDS FOR CIVIL RIGHTS. Rise of African American Influence After WW II campaign for African American rights began to escalate for several reasons: 1.
Introduction to Civil Rights Movement Explain, describe and identify key events in the Civil Rights Movement.
Background  Post WWI & WWII movement to urban areas  African Americans influencing party politics by the 1950s  Conflicting feelings about Cold War.
The Civil Rights Movement. Justice Delayed Although freed under the 13 th Amendment African Americans were restricted under things like the Jim Crow Laws.
Goal 5.06A “The Civil Rights Struggle” I: Struggle for Rights A: Discrimination= unfair treatment based on prejudice against a certain group. B: Civil.
Civil Rights Heats Up Brown v. Board of Education 1954 –Ruled that schools should be racially integrated Rosa Parks 1955 –Montgomery Bus Boycott Troops.
Civil Rights Part 1 Segregation. In the Beginning….. Declaration of Independence Declaration of Independence “All Men are Created Equal” “All Men are.
Name the fifteen year old high school student who refused to move from her seat on the bus.
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.
 Make a list of what your already know about the Civil Rights Movement.
Unit 9 Modern SC Compare the social and economic impact of World War II and the Cold War on South Carolina with its impact on the rest of the United.
29-1: Taking on Segregation : What did the Civil Rights Act of 1875 do? It outlawed segregation in public facilities In congress, Robert Elliot.
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.
Read the handout, “Nullifying the Separate but Equal Principle Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas, 1954” answering … (1) In previous Civil Rights.
 July 26, 1948, President Harry Truman issued and Executive Order to Abolish Segregation in the Armed Services  It Was Implemented Over.
CIVIL RIGHTS FIGHTING FOR EQUALITY Mrs. Bryant’s 5 th Grade Georgia Standards WJIS.
21.1 Taking on Segregation. The Segregation system ■The Civil Rights Act of 1875 had outlawed segregation in public facilities ■In 1890 Louisiana passed.
The Movement for Democracy
Brown vs. Board of Education
The Supreme Court Says…
Chapter 21 Section 1: Taking on Segregation
Early Demands for Equality
#44 Chapter 21 Civil Rights Section 1 Taking on Segregation
Civil Rights Movement.
The Civil rights Movement
The Civil Rights Movement in Virginia
Civil Rights Movement Terms List (213).
African American Civil Rights Caesar Chavez and the UFW
What did the Civil Rights Act of 1875 do?
The Civil Rights Struggle
Beginnings of the Civil Rights Movement
Civil rights movement.
Politics in SC during the late 20th Century
Civil Rights Movement.
The Civil Rights Movement
Oliver Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka
Presentation transcript:

The Civil Rights Movement Indicator 8-7.4: Explain the factors that influenced the economic opportunities of African American South Carolinians during the latter twentieth century, including racial discrimination, the Briggs v.Elliott case, the integration of public facilities and the civil rights movement, agricultural decline, and statewide educational improvement. (H, P, E)

The Fight for Equal Education

Liberty Hill School, )List, using generalities the objects, activities, and people in the photograph. 2)Make three inferences from this photograph. 3)What questions do you have about the photograph? 1)List, using generalities the objects, activities, and people in the photograph. 2)Make three inferences from this photograph. 3)What questions do you have about the photograph?

Summerton Graded School, )List, using generalities the objects, activities, and people in the photograph. 2)Make three inferences from this photograph. 3)What questions do you have about the photograph? 1)List, using generalities the objects, activities, and people in the photograph. 2)Make three inferences from this photograph. 3)What questions do you have about the photograph?

Compare and Contrast these two schools. Liberty Hill School, 1947 Summerton Graded School, 1947

Briggs v. Elliott Background: Clarendon County – 1949 White children – 2,375 students and 30 buses Black children- 6,531 students and NO buses Parents of African American students requested school buses. Background: Clarendon County – 1949 White children – 2,375 students and 30 buses Black children- 6,531 students and NO buses Parents of African American students requested school buses.

Briggs v. Elliott Local leaders of the NAACP and 25 parents filed a lawsuit for equal treatment under the law as required by the 14 th amendment to federal court. Briggs v. Elliott was the first of five cases that became part of the landmark Brown v. Board of Education in Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas Decision: Segregation in public schools was unequal Local leaders of the NAACP and 25 parents filed a lawsuit for equal treatment under the law as required by the 14 th amendment to federal court. Briggs v. Elliott was the first of five cases that became part of the landmark Brown v. Board of Education in Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas Decision: Segregation in public schools was unequal

Southern Resistance Brown ruling met with violent opposition and delay by government – Equalization Effort: SC tried to make African American schools equal to whites – White Citizens Councils created – Strom Thurmond’s Southern Manifesto – White flight Full scale integration did not occur until 1970s Brown ruling met with violent opposition and delay by government – Equalization Effort: SC tried to make African American schools equal to whites – White Citizens Councils created – Strom Thurmond’s Southern Manifesto – White flight Full scale integration did not occur until 1970s

The Civil Rights Movement in SC

Other Landmark Civil Rights Events Elmore v. Rice – Declared all white Primary elections unconstitutional Montgomery Bus Boycotts (Rosa Parks) – City busses could not be segregated Lunch Counter Sit-Ins – Greensboro – Friendship Nine Orangeburg Massacre Elmore v. Rice – Declared all white Primary elections unconstitutional Montgomery Bus Boycotts (Rosa Parks) – City busses could not be segregated Lunch Counter Sit-Ins – Greensboro – Friendship Nine Orangeburg Massacre

Notable Civil Rights Leaders from SC Septima P. Clark – Sought equal pay for African American and white school teachers Modjeska Monteith Simkins – Sought to equalize teacher salaries and reform the all white primary – Assisted in the Briggs v. Elliot decision Matthew J. Perry – Civil rights lawyer who challenged segregation – SC’s First African American federal judge Septima P. Clark – Sought equal pay for African American and white school teachers Modjeska Monteith Simkins – Sought to equalize teacher salaries and reform the all white primary – Assisted in the Briggs v. Elliot decision Matthew J. Perry – Civil rights lawyer who challenged segregation – SC’s First African American federal judge

Septima P. Clark Matthew J. Perry Modjeska Simkins