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The Civil Rights Era

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The Civil Rights Era USHC-8.1 Analyze the African American Civil Rights Movement, including initial strategies, landmark court cases and legislation, the roles of key ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Civil Rights Era


1
The Civil Rights Era
  • USHC-8.1 Analyze the African American Civil
    Rights Movement, including initial strategies,
    landmark court cases and legislation, the roles
    of key civil rights advocates and the media, and
    the influence of the Civil Rights Movement on
    other groups seeking equality.

2
AIM
  • To understand the African-American struggle for
    civil rights during the 1950s and 1960s.

3
What color does a person have to be?
  • What does Colored actually mean? How did you
    come to that meaning?
  • Jim Crow Laws
  • What was the main goal of these laws?
  • Demean, suppress, and keep separate
  • Separate but Equal
  • Was this the case?
  • Laws challenged
  • 1950s and 1960s
  • How were they challenged? What were the
    consequences of challenging these types of laws?

4
AIM
  • TLW explain how legalized segregation deprived
    African-Americans of their rights as citizens.
  • TLW summarize civil rights legal activity
    including the response to the Plessy and Brown
    cases.

5
Vocabulary
  • Segregation-the separation of people on the basis
    of race
  • Desegregation-end of segregation
  • Jim Crow Laws-laws enacted by Southern states
    and local government to separate white and black
    people in public and private facilities.

6
Segregation
  • Plessy v. Ferguson
  • Civil Rights Act of 1875 act outlawed segregation
  • In 1883, all-white Supreme Court declares Act
    unconstitutional
  • 1896 Plessy v. Ferguson ruling separate but
    equal constitutional
  • Many states pass Jim Crow laws separating the
    races
  • Facilities for blacks always inferior to those
    for whites

7
Challenging Segregation in the Courtroom
  • The NAACP Legal Strategy
  • Professor Charles Hamilton Houston leads NAACP
    legal campaign
  • Focuses on most glaring inequalities of
    segregated public education
  • Places team of law students under Thurgood
    Marshall
  • win 29 out of 32 cases argued before Supreme
    Court
  • Brown v. Board of Education
  • Marshalls greatest victory is Brown v. Board of
    Education of Topeka
  • In 1954 case, Court unanimously strikes down
    school segregation

8
Reaction to Brown
  • Resistance to School Desegregation
  • Within 1 year, over 500 school districts
    desegregate
  • Some districts, state officials, pro-white groups
    actively resist
  • Court hands Brown II, orders desegregation at
    all deliberate speed
  • Eisenhower refuses to enforce compliance
    considers it impossible

9
Questions to ponder(Exit Slip 3/20/12)
  • Is/Was there any way that separate educational
    facilities could ever be considered equal?
  • How important is education to achieving
    opportunities?

10
AIM
  • TLW explain how legalized segregation deprived
    African-Americans of their rights as citizens.
  • TLW summarize civil rights legal activity
    including the response to the Plessy and Brown
    cases.
  • Sub-objective
  • Analyze political cartoons and photographs to
    understand the response to the Brown case.

11
Making connections
  • Do you believe that rejection is a key part of
    discrimination?
  • Can you recall a time when you felt rejected by
    friends or peers?
  • What feelings were associate with your rejection?

12
Brown Vs. Board of Ed. Review
  • Segregation in Education is NOT Equal!
  • All schools will be integrated, not just the
    Topeka School District.
  • President Eisenhower did not want to force this,
    but some events made cause for intervention.
  • Were the schools integrated in a timely fashion?
    Why or why not?
  • What region of the country do you think resisted
    integration in the schools?

13
Exit Slip
  • How did the Brown decision affect the cause of
    civil rights?
  • Did this court case decision effectively end
    segregation? Why or why not?

14
Review Effects of Brown
  • How did the Brown decision affect schools outside
    of Topeka?
  • Why werent school in all regions desegregated
    immediately after the Brown II decision?
  • What was the historical impact of the Brown
    decision?

15
AIM
  • TLW analyze initial strategies used in the
    African-American Civil Rights Movement.
  • TLW analyze the role of media in the Civil Rights
    Movement.
  • Sub-objective
  • Making connections and relating to media/text to
    better understand the Civil Rights Movement.

16
Think about
  • What motivates a person to defy authority and
    risk jail?
  • Why would a whole community organize a boycott?
  • What can happen when enough people defy
    authority?
  • How can we categorize demonstrations that took
    place during the American Civil Rights movement?

17
Vocabulary
  • Boycott
  • refusal to have dealings with (like a store,
    restaurant, person, organization)
  • Sit-Ins
  • demonstration used to protest discrimination, sit
    down in a segregated business and refuse to leave
    until served
  • Freedom riders
  • activists who rode buses through the South in the
    early 1960s to challenge segregation

18
The Montgomery Bus Boycott
  • Boycotting Segregation
  • 1955 NAACP officer Rosa Parks arrested for not
    giving up seat on bus
  • Montgomery Improvement Association formed,
    organizes bus boycott
  • Elect 26-year-old Baptist pastor Martin Luther
    King, Jr. leader
  • Walking for Justice
  • African Americans file lawsuit, boycott buses,
    use carpools, walk
  • Get support from black community, outside groups,
    sympathetic whites
  • 1956, Supreme Court outlaws bus segregation
  • What kind of demonstration was this?

19
Demonstrating for Freedom
  • SNCC (Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee)
    adopts nonviolence, but calls for more
    confrontational strategy
  • Influenced by Congress of Racial Equality (CORE)
    to use sit-ins
  • - refuse to leave segregated lunch counter
    until served
  • First sit-in at Greensboro, NC Woolworths shown
    nationwide on TV
  • In spite of abuse, arrests, movement grows,
    spreads to North
  • Late 1960, lunch counters desegregated in 48
    cities in 11 states

20
Riding for Freedom
  • (Congress of Racial Equality) COREs Freedom
    Rides
  • 1961, CORE tests Court decision banning
    interstate bus segregation
  • Freedom ridersblacks, whites sit, use station
    facilities together
  • Riders brutally beaten by Alabama mobs one bus
    firebombed
  • If bus segregation was ban, why did these riders
    take these bus trips?

21
Freedom Summer
  • Freedom SummerCORE, SNCC project to register
    blacks to vote in MS
  • Volunteers beaten, killed businesses, homes,
    churches burned

22
AIM
  • TLW analyze the role of media in the Civil Rights
    Movement.

23
Media
Fannie Lou Hammers speech to the Democratic
National Convention 1964
Central High School in Little Rock Arkansas 1957
TV Coverage of Civil Rights Movement
The Greensboro Sit-In Feb. 1960
The Selma March 1965
24
Media
  • What part did the media play in the Civil Rights
    Movement?
  • What effect do you think television coverage of
    events such as integration in Little Rock have on
    the nation?

Effects of Media on the Civil Rights Movement
25
Exit Slip
  • Can you recall a time when you or someone you
    know took an unpopular stand? Explain the
    situation, motivation, and results. How is this
    similar to the civil rights activists stand?
  • How did freedom riders expose Southern resistance
    to desegregation rulings?

26
AIM
  • Analyze the African American Civil Rights
    Movement including the roles of key civil rights
    advocates.
  • TLW analyze key legislation during the Civil
    Rights Movement.

27
Vocabulary
  • De facto segregation-
  • racial separation established by practice and
    custom, not by law
  • De jure segregation-
  • a racial separation established by law

28
Example MLK Jr.
  • Tactics
  • Non-violent soul force
  • Civil Disobedience
  • non-violent protests, demonstrations, boycotts
  • Organizations
  • NAACP (National Associate for the Advancement of
    Colored People)
  • Southern Christian Leadership Conference
  • Legacy
  • Letter from Birmingham Jail
  • I Have a Dream
  • Non-violence
  • Greatest Contribution
  • King used nonviolence to advocate for equal
    rights.

29
Exit SlipFill in the spider diagram with
examples of organizations, leaders, and Supreme
Court decisions of the civil rights movement up
to 1960.
Supreme Court Decisions
Organizations
Challenging Segregation
Leaders
Tactics
30
AIM
  • TLW analyze key legislation during the Civil
    Rights Movement.

31
Civil Rights Act of 1957
  • 1st Civil Rights law since Reconstruction
  • Gave the attorney general greater power over
    school desegregation
  • Gave the federal government jurisdiction
    (authority) over violations of African-American
    voting rights.

32
Civil Rights Act of 1964
  • Prohibited discrimination because of race,
    religion, national origin, and gender.
  • All citizens had the right to enter libraries,
    parks, washrooms, restaurants, theaters, and
    other public accommodations.

33
Voting Rights Act of 1965
  • Eliminated the so-called literacy tests that had
    disqualified many voters
  • Stated federal examiners could enroll voters who
    had been denied by local officials.

34
Civil Rights Act of 1968
  • Ended discrimination in housing
  • Fair Housing Act
  • Prohibits discrimination in the sale, rental,
    financing, or advertising of housing
  • Illegal to refuse to sell or negotiate!

35
Vocabulary
  • Affirmative action-involved making special
    efforts to hire or enroll groups that have
    suffered discrimination
  • Polarization-separation into opposite camps
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