Civil rights movement in america
History Coursework Syllabus B: The Civil Rights Movement in the USA in the 1960'sQuestion 1: Source A is photographic evidence, does this mean it is reliable as evidence about the difficulties facing black protesters in the 1960s?Source shows us protesters outside what looks like a town hall, where voting is usually held. It also shows two black men protesting in what seems a quite peaceful way just as Ghandi was in South Africa in the 1910s, as he believed in Christian Pacifism which was used to put across or protest for change in a non-violent way. During the 1950s-60s Martin Luther King achieved a number of Civil rights movements by using non-violent means of protest in the U.S.A. We can not however fully believe this photograph as it may have been altered or even an organised photograph, which means that it could have been planned and nothing really happened. Although every source is useful to a Historian looking at 1960s America so we can see what it may have been like when blacks tried to vote.In the top photograph we can also see that the mens banners are being taken away from them by the police force, which suggests that, the police force did not completley agree with the black people campaigning for their civil ri
A man called James Peck wrote this account, but it doesn't say whether or not he was actually in the freedom rides. His main focus is on non-violent protest and how the movements all came about with no force or violence from the blacks just the whites; "It is significant that this progress occurred with minimum loss of life". Snowman was white or bllack but for either it was a powerful thing to say as it is saying that even through all the white supremisists attcks the black protests are still going strong. Question 2: Source B is one person's account of a single event, does this mean that it is of little use as evidence about black protest in the early 1960s?Source B tells us what it was like on a freedom ride in the 1960s. In this respect, the pictures show us the problems facing blacks in the 60s in Selma. This source is useful to a historian as it shows the oppression faced by blacks in Selma, or at least what the black civil rights movement wanted the people who saw the pictures to think was how the blacks suffered. I believe that this statement is true and from looking at the sources and from having my own knowledge I know that this is true. Sources E and F are both similar and are the most detailed of all the sources, they are also the two which help us understand why people felt that they had to protest in a non-violent way and a violent way. Question 6: The Civil Rights Movement was very successful in the 1960s" Do you agree with this interpretation? Explain your answer using all of the sources and your own knowledge. Source C explains what movements achieved although not in great detail, it explains every movement in sufficent detail to extract bits of relevant information out. Even if it is biased we can stll learn what people thought about the freedom rides and how much progress they think they achieved. The freedom rides were used to try to desegregate the interstate busses. Both of the speeches are from the time when civil rights movements really started to make some progress with The Freedom Rides, The Montgomery Bus Boycott and Little Rock. In 1965, the black people were guaranteed that if they went to vote, the Federal government would protect them. We know that this accounts are both true in what they say alos as from our oown knowledge we know that the Ku Klux Klan exploited people by hanging them, beating them, and torturing them sometimes for no apparent reason except that they were black.
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