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Published byEric Rice Modified over 9 years ago
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The Civil Rights Movement: 1953 - 1969
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Pre-Movement Conditions in the South Watch: “Never Lose Sight of Freedom” “Rights Denied,” “A Change is Gonna Come”
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The Beginnings of the Movement Why a Civil Rights Movement now? Brown v. Board of Education, 1954
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1955-1965 The Early Movement
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The Role of Birmingham, Alabama The Role of Churches Community Worship Support Black Businesses Meeting place for movement business Leadership Fred Shuttlesworth – “we cannot brag for our success because we are simply doing God’s will” James Abernathy
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Montgomery Bus Boycott -1955 Rosa Parks refuses to leave her seat Boycott begins Carpool System
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Emmett Till Case, 1955
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Emergence of Martin Luther King “Soul Force” 1957: Founds SCLC Forms a partnership with Alabama leaders
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September, 1957 – The Little Rock Nine
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1960 – Sit Ins Begin February: North Carolina April: Formation of SNCC
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1961: Freedom Rides CORE formed
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October 1961 James Meredith breaks the color barrier at Universities
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1963: Birmingham Demonstrations in Birmingham Begin
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King in Jail “Letter from a Birmingham Jail”
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May 1963 Children’s Crusade in Birmingham The Role of the Radio The role of the church
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June 11, 1963 Wallace at the University of Alabama “I say segregation now! Segregation tomorrow! Segregation Forever!” ~ Alabama governor George Wallace, 1963
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August 28, 1963: I Have a Dream!
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September 15, 1963 Church Bombings
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Freedom Summer - 1964 Intent was to help blacks register without fear of intimidation or unfair tests Death of Civil Rights Workers in Philadelphia, Mississippi
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Voter Registration as a Result of the Freedom Summer
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1964: Bullets or Ballots? Rise of Malcolm X
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1965 – The March from Selma to Montgomery February 1, 1965
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March 7, 1965: Bloody Sunday
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The Later Movement 1966: the fight for defacto segregation
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1966: The Black Panther Movement Begins
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Mexico City, 1968 Race Riots emerge in inner cities 1966: Black Power Emerges
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1967: Thurgood Marshall Legal cases pre-Supreme Court Major Supreme Court decisions
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1968: The Death of Martin Luther King, Jr.
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March 1, 1968: Kerner Commission
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Results of the Civil Rights Movement See pg. 920 in text
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Controversies over Civil Rights Segregation was still the rule until the 1970s Affirmative Action
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Justice is Served 2001: Sixteenth Street Baptist Church Bombers Rearrested and tried
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