Civil Right Movement
Civil Right Movement
Shahzeb
Introduction:
The civil rights movement was a struggle for social justice that took
place mainly during the 1950s and 1960s for Black Americans to gain
equal rights under the law in the United States. The Civil War officially
abolished slavery, but it didn’t end discrimination against Black people
—they continued to endure the devastating effects of racism, especially
in the South. By the mid-20th century, Black Americans, along with many
other Americans, mobilized and began an unprecedented fight for
equality that spanned two decades.
Black men and women served heroically in World War II, despite
suffering segregation and discrimination during their deployment.
The Tuskegee Airmen broke the racial barrier to become the first
Black military aviators in the U.S. Army Air Corps and earned more
than 150 Distinguished Flying Crosses. Yet many Black veterans were
met with prejudice and scorn upon returning home. This was a stark
contrast to why America had entered the war to begin with—to
defend freedom and democracy in the world.
3. Rosa Parks:
On December 1, 1955, a 42-year-old woman named Rosa Parks found
a seat on a Montgomery, Alabama bus after work. Segregation laws
at the time stated Black passengers must sit in designated seats at
the back of the bus, and Parks complied.
When a white man got on the bus and couldn’t find a seat in the
white section at the front of the bus, the bus driver instructed Parks
and three other Black passengers to give up their seats. Parks refused
and was arrested.
7. Freedom Riders:
On May 4, 1961, 13 “Freedom Riders”—seven Black and six white
activists–mounted a Greyhound bus in Washington, D.C., embarking
on a bus tour of the American south to protest segregated bus
terminals. They were testing the 1960 decision by the Supreme Court
in Boynton v. Virginia that declared the segregation of interstate
transportation facilities unconstitutional.
Facing violence from both police officers and white protesters, the
Freedom Rides drew international attention. On Mother’s Day 1961,
the bus reached Anniston, Alabama, where a mob mounted the bus
and threw a bomb into it. The Freedom Riders escaped the burning
bus but were badly beaten. Photos of the bus engulfed in flames
were widely circulated, and the group could not find a bus driver to
take them further. U.S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy (brother
to President John F. Kennedy) negotiated with Alabama Governor
John Patterson to find a suitable driver, and the Freedom Riders
resumed their journey under police escort on May 20. But the
officers left the group once they reached Montgomery, where a white
mob brutally attacked the bus. Attorney General Kennedy responded
to the riders—and a call from Martin Luther King Jr.—by sending
federal marshals to Montgomery.
8. March on Washington:
Arguably one of the most famous events of the civil rights movement took
place on August 28, 1963: the March on Washington. It was organized and
attended by civil rights leaders such as A. Philip Randolph, Bayard Rustin
and Martin Luther King Jr.
King and other civil rights activists witnessed the signing. The law
guaranteed equal employment for all, limited the use of voter literacy
tests and allowed federal authorities to ensure public facilities were
integrated.
10. Bloody Sunday:
On March 7, 1965, the civil rights movement in Alabama took an
especially violent turn as 600 peaceful demonstrators participated in
the Selma to Montgomery march to protest the killing of Black civil
rights activist Jimmie Lee Jackson by a white police officer and to
encourage legislation to enforce the 15th amendment.
It also allowed the attorney general to contest state and local poll
taxes. As a result, poll taxes were later declared unconstitutional in
Harper v. Virginia State Board of Elections in 1966.
Part of the Act was walked back decades later, in 2013, when a
Supreme Court decision ruled that Section 4(b) of the Voting Rights
Act was unconstitutional, holding that the constraints placed on
certain states and federal review of states’ voting procedures were
outdated.
On April 4, 1968, civil rights leader and Nobel Peace Prize recipient Martin
Luther King Jr. Was assassinated on his hotel room’s balcony. Emotionally-
charged looting and riots followed, putting even more pressure on the
Johnson administration to push through additional civil rights laws.
Conclusion