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Civil Rights Movement

This text discusses the expansion and challenges faced by the Civil Rights Movement, including issues with voting, the Voter Education Project, the Freedom Summer of 1964, the Selma Campaign, important legislation, segregation and unrest, fractures in the movement, the Black Power Movement, and influential figures such as the Black Panthers, Black Muslims, and Malcolm X.

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Civil Rights Movement

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  1. Expansion & Challenges Civil Rights Movement

  2. Voting Issues • Voter Education Project (VEP) • Founded by SNCC & CORE ’62 • Registered blacks to vote > lots of opposition • Greatest challenge = Mississippi > terror tactics • 24th Amendment • Banned taxes on citizens who vote • Freedom Summer 1964 • College students registered African Americans (mostly SNCC volunteers) • Volunteers mainly white, northern & upper middle class • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2gYKcZCWv-w • Education equality • Mississippi spent $82/year on white students vs. $22/ year on black students

  3. Mississippi • Crisis in Mississippi • 1 volunteer went missing June ’64 • 3 others were arrested for speeding after investigating a church bombing • After arrest, they were never heard from again • LBJ announced major manhunt > bodies found • Results • Dec. ’64, 21 suspects were arrested for murder (most were KKK members) • State dropped charges but put on federal trial for violation of civil rights • *1st time conviction in Mississippi for killing civil rights workers • Freedom Summer was a success despite murder • Taught 3000+ students & registered 17,000 to vote

  4. Selma Campaign • Jan. ’65 MLK campaigned for voting with marches • By end of Jan, 2000+ marchers were arrested but police acted with restraint • MLK & marchers gained national attention on TV • MLK announced a 4-day march from Selma to Montgomery to protest death of a marcher by state troopers • http://www.cnn.com/2013/09/15/us/1965-selma-to-montgomery-march-fast-facts/ • Gov. George Wallace said march wouldn’t be tolerated • Mar. 7, 1965, 600 began 54-mile march on bridge outside Selma but police blocked • Police fired on marchers (shown on TV) • MLK not present at march but vowed to resume march

  5. Legislation • Civil Rights Act of 1964 • Initiated by JFK but passed by LBJ • No discrimination in public areas or employment • No unequal voting requirements • Voting Rights Act of 1965 • No literacy (or other types of tests) to prevent black voters • *1 of most important pieces of Civil Rights legislation • Within 3 weeks of passage, 27,000+ African Americans in Mississippi, Alabama & Louisiana were registered to vote

  6. Segregation & Unrest • De jure segregation • Segregation by law • Ends when laws that created it are repealed • De facto segregation • Exists thru custom & practice • *More difficult to overcome • Ex: Blacks couldn’t buy / rent in white neighborhoods; banks made loans difficult • Watts 1965 • 35,000 took part in 6-day riot destroying entire city blocks • 3000 arrested, 34 killed • Detroit July 1967 • Week of violence • 43 deaths, 1000s of injuries & arrests • Kerner Commission • Investigated causes of violence • *Blamed poverty & discrimination

  7. Fractures in the Movement • Most whites saw the civil rights movement as unified but it was actually very diverse • 1st signs of trouble = Freedom Summer 1964 because as harassment of CORE/SNCC workers in Mississippi increased, some rejected philosophy of non-violence • Also weakened when NAACP, CORE & SCLC favored compromise at MFDP while SNCC felt betrayed

  8. Black Power Movement • May 1966 • Stokely Carmichael replaced moderate leadership of John Lewis as head of SNCC • Carmichael abandoned the philosophy of non-violence • March Against Fear 1966 > after arrested, he raised a clenched fist in salute & shouted defiance • Slogan became: Black Power • Carmichael • Recognized the need for economic & political power • “This is the twenty-seventh time I have been arrested - & I ain’t going to jail no more. The only way we’re going to stop them white men from whippin’ us is to take over. We been saying freedom for 6 years - & we ain’t got nothin’. What we gonna start now is ‘Black Power.” – Stokely Carmichael June 17, 1966

  9. Black Panthers • Black Power appealed to many young African Americans • Inspired by Huey Newton & Bobby Seale who founded Black Panthers Party Oct. 1966 • They rejected nonviolence & called for a violent revolution as a means to liberation • Some carried guns & monitored neighborhoods against police brutality • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F56O3kZ9qr0

  10. Black Muslims • 1 of largest & most influential groups was the Nation of Islam • Based on Islamic religion, it was founded in 1930 & members were Black Muslims • Led by Elijah Muhammad who taught the message of black nationalism, self-discipline & self-reliance • Nation of Islam forbade smoking, gambling, alcohol & stressed cleanliness, thriftiness, & conservative dress • In the 1960s, they had 65,000 followers

  11. Malcolm X • Fiery minister of Black Muslims • Offered message of hope, defiance & black pride • Initially critical of MLK & nonviolence but in 1964, he broke with the Black Muslims & after visiting an Islamic holy site in Saudi Arabia, became a changed man • He preached black power but cooperated with other civil rights leaders & called for racial harmony • Feb. 1965 Malcolm X was assassinated by Black Muslims for being a “traitor”

  12. Assassination of MLK Jr. • MLK realized economic issues needed to be included • Went to Memphis, TN in March ’68 to help city workers in march against discrimination & pay • He led a march & rally at City Hall • The next day, James Earl Ray shot & killed MLK Jr. with a high-powered rifle as he stood on the balcony of a motel • Within hours of MLK Jr.’s death, riots erupted in 120+ cities • Within 3 weeks, 46 were dead, 2,600 were injured, & 21,000 were arrested • Nearly 55,000 troops were required to restore order

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