1 / 44

Warm Up:

Warm Up:. Do you think that homosexual people should have the right to marry?. Chapter 18 . Section 1. Civil Rights Movement Prior to 1954. NAACP Legal Defense Fund created (1940) - Thurgood Marshall - the legal arm of the civil rights movement

ayame
Download Presentation

Warm Up:

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Warm Up: Do you think that homosexual people should have the right to marry?

  2. Chapter 18 Section 1

  3. Civil Rights Movement Prior to 1954 • NAACP Legal Defense Fund created (1940) - Thurgood Marshall - the legal arm of the civil rights movement • Ban against discrimination in defense industries (1941) • Founding of Congress of Racial Equality (1942) - Dedicated to nonviolent protest • Integration of baseball by Jackie Robinson (1947) • Executive Order 9981 (1948) - Desegregated the armed forces

  4. Brown vs. Board of Education 1954 Brown vs. Board of Education 1954 • Ruled that schools could no longer be segregated • Violated constitutional guarantee of equal protection under the law • Overturned Plessy Vs. Ferguson (1896)

  5. Watch Eyes on The Prize Episode 1

  6. Warm Up: What problems existed with the Supreme Court ruling Brown vs. Board of Education? How were these problems overcome?

  7. Chapter 18 Section 2

  8. Civil Rights • Tactics based on those use by Mohandas Gandhi • Non-Violence • Use of non-violence exposed injustice, • forced change

  9. Civil Rights Strategies • Sit-ins- people began ordering an segregated restaurants and refusing to leave • Freedom Rides - African American bus riders would go to white only facilities in bus routes through out the South • Integration – African American students would attend white only schools • Boycotts • Marches • Voter Registration

  10. Watch Eyes on the Prize Episode 3

  11. The Albany Movement • Late 1961, Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) • Began a sit-in at Albany, Georgia bus station - 500 protesters arrested • MLK invited to lead more demonstrations - Brought national attention • Arrested for leading march on city hall - Refused to pay fine • Vowed to remain in jail until city desegregated • City officials refused to negotiate while King was in town • In Aug. 1962, King called off demonstrations

  12. The Birmingham Campaign • King focused on desegregating Birmingham, Alabama • Began in April 1963 • Sit-ins and marches • Protesters, including King, arrested

  13. Read: Letter from a Birmingham Jail

  14. Warm Up: Review: Letter from a Birmingham Jail • Why did Dr. King become involved in the protest in Birmingham? • Why does Dr. King promote the use of what he calls “direct action” in Birmingham? • What does Dr. King say in response to those who say that the movement to end segregation should wait? • How does Dr. King justify the fact that those participating in this non-violent campaign are breaking the law? • What, according to Dr. King, is the difference between a just law and an unjust law?

  15. The Birmingham Campaign • Fewer adults willing to risk losing jobs by going to jail • SCLC encouraged using children to protest • May 2, 1963 children aged 6-18 began to protest - 900 arrested and jailed • Starting May 3rd, 1963 police and firefighters violently broke up student demonstrations - TV cameras recorded the violence

  16. The Birmingham Campaign • Federal negotiators succeeded in getting city officials to agree to King’s demands • “most magnificent victory for justice we’ve seen in the Deep South” • Many white people in Birmingham resisted • King’s motel and home of his brother were bombed • President Kennedy ordered federal troops to restore order

  17. March on Washington • Aug. 1963 • 200,000 people attend rally at National Mall • Largest civil rights demonstration in U.S.

  18. Watch I Have a Dream Speech

  19. Chapter 18 Section 3

  20. Major Civil Rights Reforms Civil Rights Act of 1957 • Gave federal government authority to enforce civil rights laws Executive Order 11063 (1962) • Banned racial & religious discrimination in housing built or purchased with federal aid 24th Amendment 1962 • Banned poll tax

  21. Major Civil Rights Reforms Civil Rights Act of 1964 • Banned discrimination in employment • Banned discrimination in public accommodations Voting Rights Act of 1965 • Literacy tests, and other such requirements that were used to restrict black voting are made illegal. Civil Rights Act of 1968 (Fair Housing Act) • Banned discrimination in the sale or renting of housing

  22. Did the Civil Rights Movement create equality for African Americans?

  23. Chapter 18 Section 4

  24. Problems • de jure segregation – segregation by law • de facto segregation - segregation that occurs through customs and practice • de jure segregation existed in the South • de facto segregation existed throughout the nation

  25. Conditions outside the South Most northern blacks lived in cities • Faced discrimination: • Housing - All black neighborhoods • Banks • Inability to buy and improve property • Urban decay • Jobs - High unemployment and poverty

  26. Urban Unrest • Frustration over poor conditions led to violence outside the South Watts Riots (1965) - 3,000 arrested - 34 killed - Entire city blocks destroyed

  27. Civil Rights Movement goes North • SCLC focused on Chicago in 1966 - Chicago’s black community focused on economic not civil rights issues • Chicago police refused to use force - MLK found no media attention • Moved protest to white neighborhoods - Residents threw rocks and bottles at marchers - Police protected marchers • Protest backfired, whites who criticized racism in South did not want to see it exposed in the North

  28. Black Power • Stokely Carmichael became leader of SNCC • Rejected philosophy of non-violence • Called for Black Power - African Americans had to depend on themselves to solve problems

  29. The Black Panthers • Founded by Huey Newton and Bobby Seale in Oakland CA • Rejected non-violence • Only way to liberate blacks was through violent revolution • Members began to carry guns and monitor neighborhoods to guard against police brutality

  30. Black Panther Party

  31. Black Muslims • Nation of Islam founded in 1930 • Led by Elijah Muhammad • Members called Black Muslims • Preached black nationalism, self discipline & self reliance • By 1960s, 65,000 followers • Some Black Muslims took the last name “X” to represent lost African identity

  32. Malcolm X • Preached message of hope, defiance & black pride • Critical of MLK & non-violence - “revolutions overturn systems” • Made the Hajj in 1964 - Returned a changed man - Began to call for racial harmony • Assassinated by Black Muslims who considered him a traitor in 1965

  33. Assassination of King • Was in Memphis speaking on behalf of black sanitation workers • Faced discrimination in hiring and pay • Assassinated at motel the day after leading a rally April 4, 1968 • James Earl Ray • Riots erupted in 120 cities across nation - Lasted 3 weeks - 46 dead, 2,600 injured, 21,000 arrested

  34. Warm Up: Compare the philosophies of MLK Jr. and the Black Power movement.

  35. Chapter 18 Section 5

  36. Equal Rights Movements Poor People’s Campaign 1968 • Organized following the assassination of MLK • Focus on poor instead of African Americans - Lacked leadership • Congress linked movement to Communism • Beginning of decline of the Civil Rights movement

  37. Decline of Black Power • FBI began to monitor Black Power groups • Believed they had ties to Communism • Led raids, that resulted in conflicts • Many leaders were killed or arrested

  38. Results of the Civil Rights Movement Bussing – campaign to integrate schools. • Students transported from their neighborhoods to other parts of the city • Led to violent protest across the country • Mass movement of whites to the suburbs

  39. Results of the Civil Rights Movement Affirmative Action • Preference to minority and women in hiring and college admission

  40. Equal Rights Movements In addition to the Civil Rights movement Feminist Movement • Betty Freidan- The Feminine Mystique described lack of fulfillment in women's life • NOW- National organization for Women • Equal job and education opportunity, • Equal pay • Title IX 1972 - Prohibits gender discrimination in all areas of higher education, including athletics

  41. Equal Rights Movements Migrant Farm Workers • Low wages, no job contracts • UFW- United Farm Workers, founded by Cesar Chavez and Delores Huerta • Strikes and Boycotts • Today UFW workers enjoy better pay, medical benefits and paid vacations

  42. Equal Rights Native Americans • Faced poverty, reservations lacked good schools, transportation and jobs • Many had poor soil for farming

  43. Equal Rights Native Americans • AIM- American Indian Movement in 1968 • Won more control of their reservations • Wanted government to return land that had been taken unfairly • In Maine, government paid $25 billion for land that was unfairly taken

More Related