School segregation

Civil Rights Movement

  • Segregation

    Segregation
    In the 1950s, African Americans faced segregation, discrimination, and prejudice everday. Segregation separated Africans Americans from whites; banning people of different races from being together; segregated schools, water fountains, buildings, restaurants, etc.
  • Brown vs. Board of Education

    Brown vs. Board of Education
    Five cases related to the segregation of African Americans combined to form a larger case called Brown vs. Board of Education. The NAACP fought in the case to win equality. The decisions brought an end to legal segregation in schools
  • Bus Boycott

    Bus Boycott
    Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat for a white man on the bus. She was arrested for her actions, but was bailed out. This started a boycott of the buses. They fought for equality on buses which led to the Civil Rights movement.
  • Crisis in Little Rock

    Crisis in Little Rock
    The State began desegregation in schools and allowed
    9 students to enter an all-white high school.The students were escorted by troops and were faced by discrimination in large angry mobs. The treats and discrimmination made it hard for the black students.
  • Malcolm X

    Malcolm X
    Was the Nation of Islam's most effective leader and powerful speaker. Urged African Americans to be proud of who they are.
  • Sit-in

    Sit-in
    The sit-ins protested discrimination in shops when blacks sat down in an all-white restaurant until it closed to protest. The sit-ins were nonviolent. Businesspersons were forced to choose to close shop or accept the blacks .
  • Children's Marches

    Children's Marches
    Because so many adults were afraid of getting arrested, children began to protest by marching. Connor sent almost a thousand children to jail. There was chaos in the streets; fire hoses, police dogs, etc.
  • Birmingham, Alabama

    Birmingham, Alabama
    The city defied new desegregation laws; "Whites only" signs remained, segregated drinking foutains, schools, buildings,ect. remained as well. The city was "probably the most thoroughly segregated city in the United States" Connor, a bigoted bully cheif of police, arrested many African Americans and was responsible for much of the violence held in the city
  • March on Washington

    March on Washington
    A quarter of a million people marched in Washington and heard Martin Luther King JR give his "I Have A Dream" speech. The marchers demanded passage of the civil rights bill, integration of schools, an end to job discrimination and a program of job training.
  • Sixteenth Street Baptist Church Bombing

    Sixteenth Street Baptist Church Bombing
    Hatred towards African Americans caused someone to place a bomb in the church which killed four black girls. This caused African Americans feel that they were not safe even in church.
  • Civil Rights Act of 1964

    Civil Rights Act of 1964
    President Kennedy was murdered and President Johnson became President and passed the strongest civil right's law that outlawed segregation.
  • Voting Rights Act of 1965

    Voting Rights Act of 1965
    Allowed blacks to vote, banned the "literacy tests", and sent examiners to seven of the southern states to register black voters.
  • Dr. King’s assassination

    Dr. King’s assassination
    King was shot to death by James Earl. His accomplishments were enormous and he would be remembered forever by all that he had done in the Civil Rights Movement.