1 / 17

Effects of nonviolence resistance during the Civil Rights Movement.

Effects of nonviolence resistance during the Civil Rights Movement. By: Tony Paterniti. How it came about. Martin Luther King started the use of nonviolence resistance when he moved to Montgomery where he became a leader off a bus boycott.

cate
Télécharger la présentation

Effects of nonviolence resistance during the Civil Rights Movement.

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. Effects of nonviolence resistance during the Civil Rights Movement. By: Tony Paterniti

  2. How it came about • Martin Luther King started the use of nonviolence resistance when he moved to Montgomery where he became a leader off a bus boycott. • Martin Luther King learned of non violence through reading about Mohandas K. Gandhi, Henry D. Thoreau, and Christ.

  3. Thesis statement • The idea of nonviolent resistance African Americans used during the Civil Rights Movement like bus boycotts, sit-ins, and marches. • Boycotts • Sit-ins • Marches

  4. Boycotts • Boycott – to not use something, buy something, deal something, ect. as a group • Because African Americans were not treated fairly on public transportation they protested by not riding.

  5. Montgomery Bus Boycott • The Montgomery Bus boycott started on Dec. 5, 1955 and lasted and lasted almost a year with more then 90% of Montgomery's African Americans joining it. • Set of by Rosa Parks being arrested for not giving up her seat for a white person and other incidents where African Americans were not treated fairly on buses.

  6. MIA • The night of the first day of the boycott there was a meeting among the people that set up the boycott. • In the meeting the Montgomery Improvement Association(MIA) was formed to make future decisions of the boycott and other inequality issues in Montgomery. • Here is where Martin L. King came to power of Civil Rights Movement where he was elected president of the MIA.

  7. Boycotts were a success • On Nov. 13, 1956 the Supreme Court says Alabama's segregation laws are unconditional and had to go. • Montgomery found out a day later of the Supreme Court decision in a MIA meeting deciding what to do about the possible stopping of car pools.

  8. Freedom Rides • Designed to test the supreme court decision of fully integrated transportation. • The first freedom ride started on the 4th of May in 1961 intended to go from Washington, D.C. to New Orleans. • Beaten, Burned, and bombed by angry white mobs twice on the trip. • Freedom riders still did not stop because of the angry white mobs. • Another group of freedom riders were attacked in Montgomery where Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy ordered hundreds of marshals to keep the city in order.

  9. Freedom Rides

  10. Sit-Ins • Sit-ins – a nonviolent protest were people sit-in somewhere until they are served. • During the Civil Rights Movement African Americans would sit-in any place that denied them or separated them from whites until they were served or arrested.

  11. Sit-ins begining • Sit-ins began when 4 students from a college in Greensboro, SC and sat in a local department store at a whites only counter and refused to move until they were served or arrested.

  12. SNCC • Sit-ins also led to the formation of the student nonviolent coordinating committee. • After a couple weeks of the new protest sit-ins that were going 200 of the students participating were called together for a conference. • Martin L. King was one of the man speakers there and told the students they needed some kind of organization to continue the new protests. • Helped out tremendously with the Civil Movement until 5 yrs. After they were formed when the abandoned the nonviolent part due to impatience.

  13. Sit–ins • During sit-ins the people that were participating in them were treated terribly angry white people. • People that were protesting were usually beaten, mouthed off to, and had items thrown at them by angry white people. • In the end Sit-ins got African Americans served because by them sitting in taking up all the seats the store could not turn a profit due to no room for other customers.

  14. Marches • During The Civil Rights Movement African Americans had marches. • The marches started of small in littler cities. • Then grew larger in fact 1 made it all the way to Washington where thousands of protesters black or white Marched for jobs and freedom For the minorities. • Martin after had his “I Have A Dream” speech.

  15. Marches • Marches were probably the most motivational form of protests it reminded people what they were doing and that they are proud of how far they came and will keep going. • MLKs “I Have A Dream Speech” told about how African Americans were promised Freedom after the Civil War and still are not completely free 100 yrs later.

  16. March on Washington • President Kennedy at first did not want the march to go on because fear of a massive riot that could happen with the amounts of people. • March on Washington went very smoothly with no Riots • Soon after Kennedy introduced a new Civil Rights Bill. • Ended up being signed by vice president Johnson after Kennedy's assassination.

  17. Non violence • Nonviolence protest was the main fuel of the civil rights movement. • Got African Americans total equality to whites in the end. • Pushed the Civil Rights act 64’ tremendously.

More Related