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The Spread of the Civil Rights Movement

The Spread of the Civil Rights Movement. 11.10.5 Summarize the diffusion (spread) of the civil rights movement in the rural South and the urban North. Rapid Review. Discuss MLK’s strategy to obtain civil rights Black Muslims supported this leader. Who?

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The Spread of the Civil Rights Movement

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  1. The Spread of the Civil Rights Movement 11.10.5 Summarize the diffusion (spread) of the civil rights movement in the rural South and the urban North

  2. Rapid Review • Discuss MLK’s strategy to obtain civil rights • Black Muslims supported this leader. Who? • How did Malcom X’s views change after going to Mecca? • How did ThurgoodMarshalll contribute to the civil rights movement? • Explain the significance of Rosa Parks’s actions • How did the Black Panthers differ from any other group?

  3. Examine the following pictures… • What stands out to you? Why do you think students were willing to fight for equality?

  4. How do you think these groups differ from the previous ones?

  5. SCLC • Churches served as community centers since the end of Civil War • Church leaders= community leaders • MLK • After the Montgomery bus boycott, King formed the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) • “to carry on nonviolent crusades against the evils of second-class citizenship.” • SCLC planned protests and demonstrations around the South • Faced fierce resistance from KKK and even police • How did the SCLC contribute to the Civil Rights movement?

  6. SCLC • SCLC used churches as its base to: • Protest • Demonstrations • Marches • Opponents of Civil Rights often targeted churches 

  7. SNCC • Ella Baker (a member of the SCLC) helped form Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee • SNCC (“snick) • made up of college students

  8. Sit-Ins • SNCC paid students $10/week salary • Organized voter registration in the South • Sit-Ins • Protesters sat down at segregated lunch counters until served • Police was called. Whites beat and poured food over students who refused to strike back. • TV coverage sparked many other sit-ins across the South

  9. Little Rock Nine (9) • Brown v. Board of Education • Ended segregation • Resistance to desegregation • Governor of Arkansas refused to desegregate • Ordered the National Guard to turn away black high school students in Little Rock • 9 AA students voluntarily integrated to Little Rock Central High • Eisenhower ordered troops to help them attend • Students were allowed but were harassed in school by some whites • Pair Share: Would you have the courage to do this?

  10. Television • Birmingham, Alabama most segregated city in U.S. • MLK and the SCLC used nonviolence to integrate city. • Protests continued for 1 month • Television showed: • police attacking protesters. • Used dogs and fire hoses • Protests • Economic boycotts • Negative media coverage • Convinced leaders in Birmingham to accept changes • Describe the impact of television during the CR movement.

  11. Latinos fight for civil rights • Cesar Chavez organized the Hispanic farm workers in California • Used nonviolent protest to get better pay and conditions • Founded UFWOC with Dolores Huerta • Convince supermarkets and shoppers to boycott grapes • Chavez went to a three week fast

  12. The American Indian Movement • Native American poorest among minority groups • Suffered from alcoholism and tuberculosis • Death rate among infants nearly twice the national average • AIM formed in 1968 • Confronted the government over rights of Native American tribes • Used the court system to gain restoration of land in several states

  13. Japanese Americans • Pushed for reparations from the internment during World War II • Congress provided payments in 1965 & 1990

  14. Rapid Review • How did minorities cope (deal) with inequalities? • Who were the SNCC? How did they contribute to the civil rights movement? • What were some of the actions of the SCLC? • Analyze (break apart) the importance of the Little Rock Nine. • What were the goals of the UFWOC?

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