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The Civil Rights Struggle Continues. Ch. 21, Sec 4, 5. Kennedy & Civil Rights. Martin Luther King arrested in Georgia, sentenced to 4 months hard labor. While running for President in 1960, John F. Kennedy (Democrat)persuaded Georgia to release King on bail.
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The Civil Rights Struggle Continues Ch. 21, Sec 4, 5
Kennedy & Civil Rights • Martin Luther King arrested in Georgia, sentenced to 4 months hard labor. • While running for President in 1960, John F. Kennedy (Democrat)persuaded Georgia to release King on bail. • Many black citizens switched votes to Kennedy, helped him barely win election. • As Mass. Senator, JFK voted for civil rights, did not do much to help. • As President, moved very slowly on civil rights issues. • Needed support of white Southern Democrats.
Freedom Rides in 1961 forced JFK into action. • Went on tv, publicly supported civil rights movement. • Hours later, NAACP official Medgar Evers shot & killed in Mississippi. • JFK introduced bill prohibiting segregation in public places, banned discrimination wherever federal funding was used, advanced school desegregation. • Southern Democrats prevented bill from coming to vote.
To give support to JFK’s bill, civil rights leaders organized March on Washington August 1963. • 200,000 came from all over USA to call for “jobs & freedom”. • Speakers/performers-writer James Baldwin, entertainer Sammy Davis, Jr., Baseball player Jackie Robinson, singers Joan Baez, Bob Dylan, Peter, Paul & Mary. • March was peaceful with no violence. • During March, King gave “I Have A Dream” speech. • March was great example of civil rights movement, but did nothing to help move legislation.
Sammy Davis, Jr. Jackie Robinson
Bob Dylan Joan Baez
3 months later, JFK assassinated, Democrat Lyndon B. Johnson sworn in. • Pushed Congress to pass JFK’s civil rights bill to “honor his memory”. • House passed bill, Senate filibustered. • Used nonstop speeches to prevent vote. • Republicans used cloture to force vote. • Procedure to end debate, call vote. • June 1964-Civil Rights Act of 1964 passed, became law.
Civil Rights Act of 1964 • Included: • Title I-Banned different voter registration standards for blacks and whites. • Title II-Prohibited discrimination in public places. • Included motels, restaurants, gas stations, theatres, arenas. • Title VI-Federal funds withheld from programs practicing discrimination. • Title VII-Banned discrimination based on race, sex, religion, national origin by employers, unions. • Also created Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)-investigated charges of job discrimination.
Even with new law, civil rights movement resisted in south. • 1964-Civil rights groups organized voter registration drive in Mississippi. • Came to be known as Freedom Summer. • Whites angry about law, voter drive, KKK held rallies to intimidate rights groups. • During Freedom Summer, 80 mob attacks, volunteers beaten, some shot, 3 murdered. • Black homes & churches firebombed, burned. • Did not stop rights groups.
Summer 1964-Democratic national convention. • SNCC, new Mississippi voters organized Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party (MFDP), demanded they be seated as true delegates for Mississippi. • LBJ offered them 2 of 68 seats, promised rules would change for ‘68 convention. • MFDP refused, felt it fell short of goals. • In Selma, AL, police arrested blacks trying to register to vote. • King, other leaders organized Selma March from Selma to capital Montgomery, 50 miles. • Attacked by police, mob, beaten, whipped, tear gassed. • LBJ sent in National Guard, marshals, troops to protect marchers. • Thousands joined marchers-25,000 total.
Due to Selma March, LBJ & Congress passed Voting Rights Act of 1965. • Federal officials could register voters if local officials refused. • Ended all literacy tests, barriers to voting. • 1964-24th Amendment ratified. • Outlawed poll tax, which was still used in south.
Civil rights movement turns angry • Many black citizens felt that movement was working, but too slowly. • Wanted to take more drastic steps. • Malcolm Little, known as Malcolm X. • Raised listening to “back-to-Africa” messages. • While in jail for burglary, joined Nation of Islam, aka Black Muslims. • Viewed whites as oppressive, preached black separation.
Nation of Islam leader Elijah Muhammad taught that Allah would create “Black Nation”, a union of all non-whites. • Malcolm X learned from Muhammad, preached black nationalism-separate identity & racial unity of black community. • X opposed integration, goals of early civil rights leaders. • X eventually broke with Nation of Islam, formed group Muslim Mosque, Inc. • When X made hajj to Mecca, saw all races worshipping together. • Changed attitude completely, became willing to work with other civil rights leaders, whites. • 1985-X assassinated at rally in New York by 3 Nation of Islam members.
Black Power movement • SNCC leader Stokely Carmichael was tired of nonviolent protest, being beaten & jailed. • Urged members to carry guns, rejected white involvement in SNCC. • 1966-SNCC broke with peaceful activists. • Advocated black power-unite, do what it takes to achieve rights & equality. • Black power movement led to creation of new organizations.
Black Panthers formed by Bobby Seale & Huey Newton. • Wanted blacks to lead their own communities. • Wanted gov’t to rebuild ghettos from years of neglect. • Wanted to fight “police brutality” in ghettos. • Fought police, whites, other civil rights leaders. • Panthers, SNCC completely split from peaceful groups like NAACP.
Huey Newton Bobby Seale
Riots • 1965-68, movement turned violent. • 1965-black man pulled over for drunk driving in Watts, Los Angeles. • Started out friendly, suspect resisted arrest, cop hit him with baton, led to six days of riots. • Police & national guard eventually regained order, 34 dead, thousands injured. • Riots spread to other cities throughout 1966-67. • Gov’t set up National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders. • NACCD said riots due to anger in ghettos. • US was moving toward separate societies-one black, one white.