Civil Rights Movement
In 1947, Branch Rickey of the New York Dodgers made history by signing Jackie Robinson to the Dodgers, the first African American major league baseball player. Jackie made a huge step for himself but also for all African Americans in the nation. A few years later, in 1954, the Supreme Court settled a case called Brown vs. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas where they reversed Plessy vs. Ferguson stating that segregation was constitutional as long as equal facilities were provided. This action got the ball rolling for the civil rights movement because it showed the African Americans that the federal government was now on their side. In 1955, Rosa Parks boarded a bus in Montgomery, Alabama and ignited the progress of the movement. Soon a pastor, Martin Luther King, emerged as a great leader for the movement. His unique non-violent approach to achieving the goals for civil rights establis
Martin Luther King organized a non-violent approach to protesting against segregation in the south. He adopted this idea of peaceful demonstration from the leader of India, Gandhi. One of these objectives was the desegregation of schools. Since the Supreme Court ruled that segregation is illegal in Brown vs. Another strategy was to fill up all the jails till there was no room left. She just remained seated and was taken to jail. The passiveness of the African Americans' demonstrations was very effective in a number of ways. A group called the Freedom Riders exposed injustice by confronting or breaking unfair laws. The main goal of the civil rights movement was to provide African Americans with equal rights in society. Since they followed a strict rule of no violence, their efforts earned respect from whites and blacks all over the country and the world. hed King as an effective guide for the African Americans' in the nation. African Americans joined together and showed their opposition to inequality at lunch counters across the south that were reserved for whites. There was no violence involved, although there were many threats. The African Americans' tactics angered many, but nothing could be done except to change the laws and enact them.
Common topics in this essay:
African Americans,
African Americans',
Luther King,
Rosa Parks,
Topeka Kansas,
Declaration Independence,
Supreme Court,
According King,
African American,
Faubus Arkansas,
african americans,
civil rights,
african americans',
civil rights movement,
rights movement,
vs board,
brown vs,
supreme court,
martin luther,
unjust law,
brown vs board,
martin luther king,
whites african,
|