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Explore the accomplishments and obstacles faced by the Civil Rights Movement from 1950-1968, including landmark court cases, nonviolent protests, and violent resistance. Learn about key figures, such as Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King Jr., and legislation like the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
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The Civil Rights Movement 1950-1968
The Civil Rights Movement has often been called the 2nd Reconstruction. Write a brief description of what happened during Reconstruction (1865-1877) and Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) based on anything that you remember. • Then, write your opinion on the meaning of the cartoon.
WWII renewed interest in civil rights • minorities fighting against oppression abroad only to return home to the same • armed forces integrated after WWII
consider: What are some ways to protest something without using violence? essential question: What were the accomplishments of the Civil Rights Movement? How did nonviolent protest become aggressive?
Nonviolent resistance in the 1950s • NAACP and Thurgood Marshall help end segregation in schools 1. Brown v. Board of Education (1954)
NAACP and Thurgood Marshall help end segregation in schools 1. Brown v. Board Front and center, Linda Brown, the plaintiff in Brown v. Board, the 1954 Supreme Court case that found segregation illegal.
NAACP and Thurgood Marshall help end segregation in schools 1. Brown v. Board Chief Justice Earl Warren would lead a Supreme Court that would make many progressive decisions from 1953-1969.
1. Brown v. Board • with “all deliberate speed” was how the Court ordered states to integrate facing fierce resistance
2. Montgomery bus boycott (1955) • Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King, Jr. led a successful bus boycott that led to the Supreme Court outlawing bus segregation
2. Montgomery bus boycott (1955) • Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King, Jr. led a successful bus boycott that led to the Supreme Court outlawing bus segregation
nine black students integrating Little Rock H.S. 3. the Little Rock Nine (1957) Pictured here with Daisy Bates, a newspaper journalist and active member in the local NAACP, are nine students, Ernest Green, Thelma Mothershed, Elizabeth Eckford, Terrace Roberts, Carlotta Walls, Gloria Ray, Jefferson Thomas, Melba Pattillo, and Minnijean Brown. Bates would become the advisor for the nine students.
3. the Little Rock Nine (1957) • many whites resist even after the National Guard sent to protect them
4. Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC, 1957) and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC, 1960) • nonviolent resistance movement groups emerge such as SCLC, led by King, and SNCC, led by students
consider:As nonviolent resistance is increasingly successful, what kind of reaction would you expect from whites resistant to change? essential question: What were the accomplishments of the Civil Rights Movement? How did nonviolent protest become aggressive?
Nonviolent protest begins to receive a violent reaction, especially in the Deep South.
i.e. Emmett Till murder (1955) represented both the violent reaction to Brown and the nonviolent protest of the 1950s
1. the sit-in movement • black and white college students protested segregation by sitting at whites-only lunch counters
2. Freedom Riders • black and white protesters ride buses through the South to challenge federal government to enforce ban on segregation on interstate buses; federal government enforcing Supreme Court ban on segregation on interstate buses
3. Birmingham riot • images shocked the nation, many whites sympathize with African Americans and ask for government action
Turning Point: JFK assassinated (he had promised civil rights; Johnson will provide in his memory) AND
Martin Luther King Jr.’s March on Washington (site of the “I Have a Dream” speech) made the movement acceptable to most whites.
A visible violent reaction to civil rights protests led to public sympathy for the cause, which led to civil rights legislation.
1. Civil Rights Act of 1964 • banned segregation in public places and discrimination in employment; the following summer was Freedom Summer, where volunteers helped African Americans register to vote in Mississippi, in the murder of three volunteers
2. Voting Rights Act of 1965 • banned literacy tests
3. 24th Amendment • banned poll taxes
Violent resistance to nonviolent protest leads to new civil rights legislation, especially after the violence receives national exposure through the media.
The important images: Which term from the front is pictured? • A picture will be shown that refers to one of the terms we have studied so far in the Civil Rights Movement. • Someone’s name will be picked from the bucket of equality. • That person will give the term associated with the picture (group can help) OR • Another name will be picked.
Birmingham riot This image of Parker High School student Walter Gadsden being attacked by dogs was published in The New York Times on May 4, 1963
Rosa Parks or Montgomery Bus Boycott Rosa Parks being fingerprinted after her arrest for refusing to give up her seat on the bus.
Freedom Riders This bus was firebombed. The second bus was attacked by a mob.
Brown v. Board Linda Brown and her mother outside the Supreme Court building
Sit-in movement Jackson, Mississippi 1963
The Little Rock Nine Hazel Massery is the Caucasian girl seen yelling as Elizabeth Eckford attempted to enter the school on her first day.
Montgomery Bus Boycott Black people take cars together during the bus boycott while a Montgomery, Ala., bus is deserted in the background.
Martin Luther King, Jr. or March on Washington or “I Have a Dream” speech