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Civil Rights in an Uncivil Society

Civil Rights in an Uncivil Society.

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Civil Rights in an Uncivil Society

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  1. Civil Rights in an Uncivil Society The modern civil rights movement emerged during World War II and eventually transformed the nation in the 1950s and 1960s. Much like the earlier civil rights movement of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the modern movement had different leaders with different visions and methods, from A. Philip Randolph, to Martin Luther King, Jr., to Malcolm X.  This lecture explores the messages and actions of these three leaders, the history of the movement as a whole, and some of the most significant civil rights legislation.

  2. I) Ninety Years of Stability • Jim Crow Laws 1. Little Voting a) Poll Taxes, Grandfather Clauses, Literacy Tests 2. Segregation a) Plessy v. Ferguson *Did migration to northern cities empower African-Americans politically and economically? Why or why not

  3. II) The Seeds for Reform • 1920s - Marvin Garvey and the Harlem Renaissance • Roosevelt and the New Deal: 1) Fair Employment Practices Committee: shall not be affected by race, color and creed 2) Roosevelt did not vigorously enforce the laws as he was afraid he would lose the south saying: “I don’t think, quite frankly, that we can bring about the millennium just yet.” *Compare and contrast the tactics pursued by Booker T. Washington, W.E.B. Du Bois, and Marcus Garvey with those of post-WWII civil rights leaders.

  4. III) Second Reconstruction (1954-1968) Baseball (1947) and Army desegregate B) Lead up to Brown 1) De-segregation of Big Leagues 2) Truman de-segregates military (1948) 3) Truman bans discrimination in hiring federal employees (1948) “I am not asking for social equality, because no such things exist but I am asking for equality of opportunity for all human beings, and, as long as I stay, I am going to continue that flight.” -Truman in a letter to a friend 1948

  5. III) Second Reconstruction (1954-1968) - Brown v. Board C) Brown v. Board of Education (1954) 1) Little Federal Support 2) White Backlash a) Formation of White Citizen’s Councils b) Mississippi “Emmet Till” 1955 - “Bye baby” 1) Lynching All Deliberate Speed

  6. III) Second Reconstruction (1954-1968) - Public Transportation (Montgomery Bus Boycott) 3) Public Transportation a) Montgomery Bus Boycott 1) Rosa Parks 2) Moderation 3) One Year Boycott 4) Country Court Order 5) Federal Court Ruling 6) Black Attitudes Evolve

  7. III) Second Reconstruction (1954-1968) - Leadership and philosophy • b) Martin Luther King Jr. leads a movement • 1) Head of boycott organization • 2) ideals • a) Henry David Thoreau • b) Mohandas Gandhi • 3) SCLC • 4) March on Washington

  8. c) The struggle to integrate schools 1) failure of Autherine Lucy 2) Central High School 3) James Meredith a) governor Ross Barnett

  9. Jackson, MS 1) Busses a) desegregation of busses b) stopped in segregated bus areas E) Other Actions/ Events 1) Sit-ins (Feb 1960) 2) Freedom Riders a) CORE b) SNCC 3) Voting Registration: “Freedom Summer” 4) Birmingham: MLK’s Letter a) Commissioner of public safety Bull Connor: GRRR 5) March to Montgomery a) Selma

  10. E) Governmental Actions 1) The Civil Rights Act of 1957 a) Ike’s Reluctance 2) Kennedy’s administration's Actions a) promises b) initial stance c) some movement (ICC) d) change of heart- Birmingham 3) Civil Rights Acts of 1964 a) Effects since 1964 1) Dramatic rise in black voting 2) Mood of Congress shifted 4) Voting Rights Act of 1965 5) Civil Acts of 1968

  11. The 1930s: The NAACP and the Courts

  12. A. Philip Randolph and the March on Washington Movement

  13. Roosevelt refused to meet all of Randolph's demands, but the two men did reach a compromise. In June 1941, in exchange for Randolph calling off the march on Washington, Roosevelt issued Executive Order 8802, which created the Fair Employment Practices Committee (FEPC). The President's order stated that the federal government would not hire any person based on their race, color, creed, or national origin. The FEPC was supposed to enforce the order to ban discriminatory hiring within the federal government and in corporations that received federal contracts. Photograph of billboard promoting legislation for fair employment practices

  14. Civil Rights After World War II At the conclusion of World War II, there were two reasons for optimism in the civil rights movement: 1. White alliances. Many white liberals were now committed to civil rights. 2. Election returns of 1946. Republicans won in many districts that had formerly been staunchly Democratic, proving to Democrats that blacks were a viable political group. By the decades of the 1940s and 1950s, the black vote had established itself as a political constituency comparable to big labor, big business, agriculture, and other special interest groups.

  15. President Truman and Civil Rights

  16. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X • The emergence of Martin Luther King, Jr. as a civil rights leader brought a new tactic to the movement: nonviolent resistance. This method of peaceful protest was a combination of the teachings of Mahatma Gandhi and Jesus. King described it as "a philosophy deeply embedded in our religious tradition." Malcolm X (1925-1965) stood in sharp contrast to King and his philosophy of nonviolent resistance and racial integration. X was born Malcolm Little, the son of a Baptist preacher who followed Marcus Garvey. When he was a boy, members of a Klan-like organization murdered his father. He dropped out of school after the eighth grade and moved to Detroit, where he led a life of crime. In prison, he encountered the religious teachings of Elijah Muhammad, leader of the Lost-Found Nation of Islam, an organization known popularly as the Black Muslims. Elijah Muhammad's message ran counter to the philosophy of integration. He argued that white men were devils and that blacks to address their social problems alone. Malcolm Little soon became a loyal follower and took "X" as his last name as a symbol of the identity stolen from the African slaves. Because of a growing rivalry, Muhammad suspended X from the Black Muslims in 1963. A few months later, X made a pilgrimage to Mecca, discovered that Islam and integration were not incompatible, and abandoned the argument that all whites were devils. He soon took the name El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz and returned to America to found the Organization of Afro-American Unity. On February 21, 1965, Shabazz was leading a rally of his organization when he was assassinated by a Black Muslim.

  17. Southern Resistance In 1956, in reaction to the Brown v. Board of Education decision, over a hundred United States Congressmen from the former Confederate States signed a "Southern Manifesto," pledging to fight the Supreme Court's decision at every turn. In 1957, events in Little Rock, Arkansas, put southern resistance to civil rights to the test. Central High School was supposed to admit nine African-American students in September of that year. Arkansas Governor Orval Faubus placed the Arkansas National Guard around the school in defiance of the desegregation order. Although President Eisenhower was no great champion of civil rights, he couldn't tolerate a direct defiance of the Supreme Court, so he sent federal troops to Little Rock and put the Arkansas National Guard under federal control. The black students entered the school, but met such strident protests and threats of violence that school officials removed them. As in other areas in the South, school officials in Little Rock decided to close the school for a time rather than carry out the desegregation order.

  18. JFK and Civil Rights The momentum for civil rights continued to grow during the Kennedy administration, although this was in spite--not because--of Kennedy. He was more concerned with maintaining the support of Southern Democrats, although three events eventually forced him to send a Civil Rights Bill to Congress:

  19. * 1961 Freedom Rides - An interracial group of CORE members and college students from the North traveled by bus down South to test the effectiveness of a 1960 Supreme Court decision which prohibited racial segregation in public accommodations, such as rest rooms, waiting rooms, and restaurants, that catered to interstate travelers. Time and again, angry white southerners clashed with these protestors. In Alabama, for example, a mob of angry whites set a bus of protestors on fire and attacked passengers who tried to escape the flames. This event drew national attention, especially from middle-class northerners who were shocked by the brutal violence they saw on television. As a result, Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy provided police escorts for the riders, although this did not prevent further violence.

  20. The "Greensboro Four" waiting to be served at Woolworth's Photograph by John G. Mobius, reprinted with permission of the News & Record, Greensboro, NC.

  21. All these events pushed JFK to take some action on civil rights, so he introduced the Civil Rights Bill in the summer of 1963. Civil rights proponents believed that they could rally national support behind their cause by organizing another march on Washington. One of the organizers was A. Philip Randolph, who had planned an earlier march on the nation's capital during World War II, but who had called off the gathering after meeting with President Roosevelt. Through the years following World War II, a March on Washington group had met annually to reiterate African-American demands for economic and social equality. Finally, in 1963, the time seemed right to carry out a March for Jobs and Freedom, designed specifically to advocate passage of a bill that had stalled in Congress. The march took place on August 28, 1963, and attracted over 200,000 black and white Americans. The culmination of the day was the soaring address of the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King: "I Have a Dream."

  22. The Civil Rights Bill was still in committee in Congress when Lee Harvey Oswald assassinated Kennedy on November 22, 1963. Kennedy's successor, Lyndon Johnson, who had been instrumental in the passage of the 1957 Civil Rights Act, pressured Congress to enact the new Civil Rights Bill as his major task. It was a formidable goal, but just one small step in Johnson's broad-reaching plan to build a "Great Society" in the United States. Johnson, in fact, is an extraordinarily important part of our story. So important, in fact, that we'll talk about his administration in our next lecture "The Almost Great Society--The 1960s."

  23. Standing in line marking time- Waiting for the welfare dime ‘Cause they can’t buy a job The man in the silk suit hurries by As he catches the poor old ladies’ eyes Just for fun he says “get a job” CHORUS That’s just the way it is Some things will never change That’s just the way it is But you don’t believe them They say hey little boy you can’t go Where the others go ‘Cause you don’t look like they do Said hey old man how can you stand To think that way Did you really think about it Before you made the rules He said, Son Chorus Well they passed a law in ‘64 To give those who ain’t got a little more But it only goes so far Because the law don’t change another’s mind When all it sees at the hiring time Is the line on the color bar 1.) What is the basic message of this song? 2.) Do you agree? why or why not? 3.) Is this song portraying a positive or negative vision? THE WAY IT IS- Bruce Hornsby

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