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Published byGeoffrey Farmer Modified over 9 years ago
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Reform movements dedicated to abolishing discrimination in the United States Struggle to be free, achieve equality and rights Starts with African Americans ◦ Leads to women’s rights movement ◦ Gay Rights Movement
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Plessy vs. Ferguson ◦ 1896 “Separate but Equal” ◦ States respond by passing Jim Crow laws Forbade interracial dating and marriage Separate schools Separate public facilities
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Segregation Continues into the 20 th Century ◦ African American response Great Migration – move North to escape discrimination ◦ Prejudice and discrimination exists in the North All-black neighborhoods White workers resent job competition from blacks
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WWII Sets Stage for Civil Rights Movement ◦ Demand for soldiers in WWII created shortage of white workers Opened new opportunities for minorities ◦ Discrimination ended in military Soldiers return determined to fight for own freedom
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◦ During War, Civil Rights organizations campaign for voting rights and challenge Jim Crow laws ◦ FDR responds Issues presidential directive prohibiting discrimination in the workplace
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NAACP fought to end segregation ◦ Trained African-American law students NAACP Legal Strategy ◦ Focus on desegregating public schools ◦ Assembles group of young law students to prepare cases to take to SC ◦ Thurgood Marshall placed in charge Win 29 of 32 cases
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Brown v. Bd. of Education, Topeka, KS ◦ May 17, 1954 Segregation deemed unconstitutional “separate is not equal”
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Resistance to School Integration ◦ 500 schools desegregate within a year ◦ Areas of African American majority Whites resist, fear losing control of schools KKK reappears White Citizens Council boycotts desegregated businesses ◦ Brown II – 1955 Desegregation “with all deliberate speed”
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1948 – Arkansas becomes first state to admit African Americans to state universities Gov. Orval Faubus – ◦ Ordered Nat’l Guard to turn away black students ◦ Fed. judge ordered Faubus to let students into school
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◦ Little Rock 9 (1954) Eight of nine students agree to go to school together Elizabeth Eckford doesn’t get phone message ◦ Eisenhower acts Placed Nat’l Guard under federal control Ordered 1000 paratroopers into Little Rock Protect Little Rock 9
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Civil Rights Act of 1957 ◦ Gave attorney general power over school desegregation ◦ Federal gov’t jurisdiction over violations of African-American voting rights
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Boycotting Segregation ◦ Jo Ann Robinson writes letter to Montgomery, Alabama Asked that bus drivers not be allowed to force riders in “colored” section to give up seats ◦ Dec 1, 1955 – Rosa Parks refuses to get up ◦ Montgomery Improvement Association Organized boycott of buses MLK, Jr. chosen as leader of group 26 yrs old
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Walking for Justice ◦ Boycott lasts 381 days African Americans refuse to ride buses Car pools and walk Nonviolent in face of violence ◦ 1956 – SC outlawed bus segregation Dec 21 – MLK sits in front seat
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Changing the World w/Soul Force ◦ Nonviolent resistance Teachings of Jesus, Thoreau, A. Philip Randolph, Gandhi ◦ Philosophy questioned Extreme violence aimed at blacks in the South Emmett Till
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Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) ◦ 1957 ◦ Civil Rights leaders and 100 ministers ◦ “carry on nonviolent crusades against evils of second-class citizenship” ◦ Wanted support of ordinary African-Americans ◦ MLK is president SNCC – Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee ◦ SCLC’s pace too slow for college students
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Demonstrating for Freedom ◦ 1960 - SNCC stages sit-in Woolworth’s store in Greensboro, NC TV captures images of white violence Sparks sit-ins across South
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