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Civil Rights. Martin Luther King…new leader. Influences on King: -Jesus – love one’s enemy - Thoreau – Civil Disobedience; refusal to obey an unjust law - A. Philip Randolph – organize massive demonstrations Gandhi – powerfully resist oppression without using violence
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Martin Luther King…new leader Influences on King: -Jesus – love one’s enemy - Thoreau – Civil Disobedience; refusal to obey an unjust law - A. Philip Randolph – organize massive demonstrations • Gandhi – powerfully resist oppression without using violence • King summed up his philosophy to white racists: “We will not hate you but we cannot…obey your unjust laws. We will soon wear you down by our capacity to suffer. And in winning our freedom we will so appeal to your heart and conscience that we will win you in the process” • Called it “Soul Force”
SCLC Southern Christian Leadership Conference • Used non-violence to protest unjust laws -100 ministers and civil rights leaders gathered in 1957 -Used churches as a base, planned to stage protests and demonstrations through the south -Grass-roots; support of ordinary African Americans of all ages -King – president
SNCC - 1960 Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee -Students viewed pace of change as being to slow -Somewhat more confrontational • Staged sit-ins • Media captured the ugly face of racism; beatings, jeering, pouring food over students who refused to strike back. • North – students formed picket lines around national chains stores that had segregation.
Freedom Riders FREEDOM RIDERS: Washington, D.C. 1961, bus ride through the south. • Two interracial teams of freedom riders to travel through south to challenge segregation; (already declared unconstitutional by Supreme Court) -Bus one ended with violence; -Bus two ended with a fire bomb in Alabama • SNCC pulled into Birmingham and met Police Commissioner Eugene “Bull” Connor’s men and were beaten and driven to TN
Freedom Riders • Occupied the white only waiting room for 18 hours; RFK convinced bus driver to continue and SNCC volunteers set out for Montgomery • No police for protection of the riders when it got to Montgomery…white mob with bats and lead pipes • Newspapers carried stories- even southern papers criticized the lack of police • JFK more direct support by sending 400 marshals to protect riders on the last part to Jackson, Miss • Attorney General and ICC issued an order banning segregation on all interstate travel including waiting rooms, restrooms, and lunch counters
Birmingham • 1963 invited King to attend because city was one of total segregation; racial violence -SCLC and King set out to desegregate the city April 3- 1963 arrived in city April 12- King and followers marched the streets, were arrested by Bull Connor -Dr. King wrote letter while in jail April 20- King posted bail and began to plan more demonstrations
Birmingham May 2, 1963- 1000 African American children marched; Bull Connor arrested 959 May 3, Another march met with fire hoses, attack dogs, and clubbed; millions of TV viewers heard children screaming • More protests, economic boycott, and negative media coverage finally desegregated the city • President Kennedy saw that only a Civil Rights Act would end the racial injustice
March on Washington August 28, 1963 • 250,000 Americans gathered in Washington, D.C. to support civil rights legislation • King delivered his “I Have a Dream” speech
Kennedy Assassinated November 22, 1963 – JFK assassinated in Dallas, TX JFK and his wife were riding with the Texas governor and his wife -One bullet went through JFK’s neck and struck the Governor -The second hit him in the back of the head -A third bullet missed and hit the curb
Conspiracy Theories More than one gunman: -36 witnesses claimed shots came from in front of the car -56 said shots were behind -5 said both Mafia: retaliation for pressure from RFK? Cuba? Israel? Soviet KGB?
SELMA SELMA CAMPAIGN: 1965 – SCLC led major campaign in Selma, Alabama to register voters -Blacks were 1/2 the population but only 3% of registered voters Hope was to lead drive to convince LBJ a federal voting act was needed By 1965, 2000 blacks had been arrested for demonstrations Selma Sheriff Jim Clark brutally attacked demonstrators
SELMA February 1965: law officers shot and killed a demonstrator, Jimmie Jackson King led to 50 mile protest from Selma to Montgomery (Alabama) -March 7, 1965, 600 protestors set out for Montgomery Protestors were met with tear gas, whips and clubs Again, TV brought the scene into every American home Johnson responded by urging Congress to pass the Voting Rights bill
-March 21, 1965- 3000 marchers set out with federal protection -Under court order only 250 were to enter city limits -25,000 were present to march into Montgomery
VOTING RIGHTS ACT 1965 Eliminated the literacy test Federal officials could enroll voters if denied by local officials Result: Selma went from 10% voting to 60%
Race Riots, Urban Violence Racial violence intensifies especially between white police and black teenagers Watts Riot , African American neighborhood in Los Angeles, police were arresting a young man for drunk driving argued with mother and race riots broke out for 6 days -34 killed, $30 million in property was destroyed Race riots took place in 1966, but in 1967 riots took place in over 100 cities
Race Riots, Urban Violence African Americans had just won major victories in civil and voting rights. What were they so angry about?? Anger stemmed from lack of economic equality of opportunity in jobs, housing, and education Johnson in 1964 announced his War on Poverty
Assassination of MLK • April 3, 1968 James Earl Ray shot MLK from across the street of his hotel room in Memphis, TN • Rage over King’s death led to the worst riots in Americans history • 125 cities exploded in flames • Hardest Hit: Baltimore, Washington D.C., Kansas City, Chicago
Assassination of Robert F. Kennedy • Was a strong supporter of Civil Rights • Campaigning for presidential nomination • June 6, 1968 assassinated by Jordanian immigrant Sirhan Sirhan who didn’t like RFK’s support of Israel • 2 months after MLK • Sirhan is still imprisoned today
Lasting Results of the Movement • Legal: -Ended de jure segregation -Civil Rights Act of 1964, Voting Rights Act of 1965, Civil Rights Act of 1968 (banned discrimination in housing) -Integration • Social: -African-American pride (African American Studies classes, more on TV) • Political: Voting -1970 2/3 African Americans were registered to vote which brought about black elected officials -300 in 1965 to 7000 by 1992
Topics Still Being Addressed Today • De facto segregation (white flight) and American attitudes • Resistance from white communities to policies of busing, spending more tax money in inner cities, etc. • Affirmative Action – giving preference to groups that suffered discrimination in the past • 1980s reverse discrimination – quotas were eased and declared unconstitutional • Preference still okay