Title: The Civil Rights Movement
1The Civil Rights Movement
- There were two phases to the Civil Rights
movement one phase between 1945-1965 and the
other after 1965.
2I. Why Did the Civil Rights Movement Take Off
After 1945?
- Black equality became a significant political
issue for the Democratic Party - WWII had been fought against racism abroadhard
to keep harboring it at home - Black veterans came home dedicated to change
- Increasing number of White Americans condemned
segregation - Discrimination in the United States hurt our
propaganda battle against the Communists
3II. The Truman Years
- Trumans 1948 election year agenda
- No significant Civil Rights congressional
legislation - Truman moves on his own to do what he can for
Civil Rights - --Desegregation of the military (1948)
- Jackie Robinsons breakthrough (1947)
4II. The Truman Years (cont.)
- Split at the 1948 Democratic convention
- Energized Truman hits the campaign trail hard
- Republican Dewey runs a boring, conservative
campaign - Trumans stunning election
- Trumans Fair Deal (1949)
5III. The Battle in the Courts
- Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)
- -- separate but equal facilities legal
- Smith v. Allwright (1944)
- First attack separate is not equal
- Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas
(1954) - -- Chief Justice Earl Warren
6III. Battle in the Courts (cont.)
- Eisenhower disapproves of Brown decision
- Desegregation with all deliberate speed
- Other Warren Court Civil Rights decisions
- Popular opposition to the Brown decision
- No real progress on desegregation at first
7IV. The Eisenhower Years
- Eisenhowers philosophy related to Civil Rights
laws - First Civil Rights Acts passed since the Civil
War (1957 and 1960) - Opposition to the integration of Little Rock
Central High School (1957) - --Governor Orville Faubus
8V. Out of the Schools and Into the Buses
- The arrest of Rosa Parks (December, 1955)
- The Montgomery, Ala. Bus Boycott
- The leadership of Martin Luther King, Jr.
- The Montgomery model for Civil Rights activism
boycott, publicity, courts - SCLC formed (1957)
9VI. A Mass Movement Takes Shape
- Lunch counter sit-ins begin Greensboro, NC
(February, 1960) - SNCC created (April, 1960)
- CORE Freedom Ride (May, 1961)
10VI. A Mass Movement Takes Shape (cont.)
- Demonstrations in Birmingham, Alabama (April,
1963) - --Eugene Bull Connor
- Letter from Birmingham City Jail
- Governor George Wallace tries to block
integration of the University of Alabama (Fall,
1963)
11VI. A Mass Movement Takes Shape (cont.)
- JFK finally begins to campaign for Civil Rights
legislation - Continued violence even in the face of some
progress - Martin Luther King, Jr. and the March on
Washington (August, 1963) - -- I Have a Dream
12VI. A Mass Movement Takes Shape (cont.)
- Mississippi Freedom Summer Project (1964)
- MFDP Protests at the 1964 Democratic convention
- Voter registration in Selma, Alabama (1965)
- --Sheriff Jim Clark
- By the mid-1960s, substantial success in the
South had been achieved
13VII. The Kennedy and Johnson Years
- JFKs initial reluctance to push for Civil Rights
laws - The integration of Ole Miss (1962)
- --James Meredith
- JFK finally decides to push past better
enforcement to new congressional Civil Rights
legislation
14VII. The Johnson Years (cont.)
- The role of Kennedys assassination in the Civil
Rights movement - Civil Rights Act of 1964
- Anti-poll tax Amendment (24th1964)
- Voting Rights Act (1965)
- Impact of the Voting Rights Act
15VII. The Johnson Years (cont.)
- The tone of public political discourse changed
after 1965 - Johnson appoints first Black cabinet secretary
Robert Weaver of HUD (1966) - Much more needed to be done for Civil Rights
outside of the South, so 2nd phase began
16VIII. The Era of Disillusionment 1965 On
- Early to mid-1960s were a hopeful time for Civil
Rights advocates - Goal of Assimilation
- A Spoiled Utopia after 1965things would not be
that simple
17A. New Problems
- Residential Discrimination
- -- Red Lining
- The Challenges of School integration in the North
- The historical, traditional segregation of
northern cities - The resurrection of the KKK once again
- More effective White opponents in the North
18B. Race Riots
- Watts Riots in Los Angeles (Summer, 1965)
- Riots each summer from 1965-1969
- --Chicago and Cleveland (1966)
- --Newark and Detroit (1967)
- --Washington, D.C. (1968)
19B. Race Riots (cont.)
- Riots as an expression of grievance against the
White American consumer society - Riots shocked the White American public
- Frustration and self-destruction expressed in
these riots - Unlike earlier race riots, these riots were not
started by White mobs
20C. Black Power
- Growing tension between SNCC and Martin Luther
King, Jr. - --Stokely Carmichael
- Black Power
- Carmichael succeeded by H. Rap Brown as head of
SNCC (1967)
21C. Black Power (cont.)
- The formation of the Black Panther Party in
Oakland, CA (1966) - --Huey Newton
- --Eldridge Cleaver
- Resurrection of the philosophy of Marcus Garvey
22C. Black Power (cont.)
- The leadership of Malcolm X
- --Black Muslims
- --Assassinated in 1965
- Cultural expressions of Black Power
- --Afro Hairstyles
- --Black-studies programs
- -- Negro no longer used
- --1968 Olympics
23D. Decline of the Civil Rights Movement
- Economic contraction works against Civil Rights
concessions - Northern phase not as successful
- Resistance from White Unions
- Vietnam replaces Civil Rights as the liberal
crusade - Martin Luther King, Jr. loses influence with LBJ