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Civil Rights, The Early Years Integration and Equality

Civil Rights, The Early Years

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Civil Rights, The Early Years. Integration and Equality. Major Goals. Empowerment Integration into mainstream American life Desegregation Respect and self-respect End of poverty End of racism and other forms of discrimination Mainstream Civil Rights Movement was part of liberal movement - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

Civil Rights, The Early Years

Integration and Equality

Page 2: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

Major Goals Empowerment Integration into mainstream American life Desegregation Respect and self-respect End of poverty End of racism and other forms of discrimination Mainstream Civil Rights Movement was part of

liberal movement Question: Could liberalism solve issues of civil

rights, poverty, and injustice?

Page 3: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

Factors in Success or Failure

Page 4: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

Positive Climate for Change

Liberal shift in politics and culture, optimism and nonconformity

Northern liberal support for racial equality Jewish support b/c of immigrant, discrimination,

and Holocaust experiences JFK idealism Cold War made it important for U.S. to prove

to world that it was meeting its ideals – civil rights issue gave U.S. a black eye in world affairs

Page 5: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

Obstacles

De jure and de facto segregation (Jim Crow) in south and parts of north – Plessy v. Ferguson, 1896

Failure of Operation Dixie, effort to organize unions in south

Solid South, conservative southern white Democrats

Massive Resistance, White Councils formed to oppose desegregation

Page 6: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

Background Factors

Great Migration WWII ideals – against Nazi racism Returning black WWII veterans Existing civil rights orgs and leaders Strong church community Growth in liberal white support Cold War climate – had to prove superiority

of U.S.

Page 7: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

Early Victories

Fighting for Fairness, Equality, and Desegregation

Precedent: pressuring government to respond A. Philip Randolph and black pressure politics

1st March on Wash., Fair Employment rules during WWII

1948 desegregation of the military Jackie Robinson and desegregation of

baseball, 1947 Symbolic power of “America’s pastime”

Page 8: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

Early Victories (continued)

Brown v. Board I & II, 1954, 1955 Thurgood Marshall: segregated schools fostered

sense of inferiority in black students Unanimous decision, but desegregation “with all

deliberate speed” Little Rock, Arkansas, 1957

Ike forced fed. govt. to act on civil rights, to use federal troops to protect students

Arkansas governor Orville Faubus opposed desegregation based on states rights rhetoric

Page 9: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

Southern Manifesto Document

Page 10: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

Strong Black Organizations and Leadership

Strong black leadership in churches and civil rights organizations were necessary to movement

SCLC, MLK, Ella Baker, various church leaders CORE, James Farmer, Bayard Rustin SNCC, Ella Baker, Stokely Carmichael NAACP Unions, A. Philip Randolph Northern black politicians Links to northern white churches, politicians,

Democratic Party, unions

Page 11: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

Nonviolence and Black Christianity

MLK: Nonviolence as ideal and strategy Combination of Christian ideals and Gandhian

nonviolence Christian belief of turning the other cheek, but used as

nonviolent strategy of resistance, protest, and for positive change

Nonviolence as strategy to overcome armed violence of southern people and officials

Conscious targeting of segregated public spaces or denial of public services

Goal of creating wider public pressure Media exposure – TV coverage of police brutality against

nonviolent protesters

Page 12: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

Nonviolence and Black Christianity (continued)

Different methods Marches Sit-downs, sit-ins Mass jailings

Ideals: political and social problems had moral and religious underpinnings and solutions

Churches, SCLC, MLK: human equality under God, righteousness of their cause; inequality, desegregation were social and moral evils

Possibility of equality on earth, imagery and language of salvation, combined with realization of American ideals

Page 13: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

Major Battles Montgomery Bus Boycott, 1956 - NAACP and

Rosa Parks targeted bus system, segregated public service; MLK joined boycott leadership

Student Sit-ins at lunch counters – started in Greensboro, NC in 1960

SNCC founded as a result - student protesters

Freedom Rides, 1961 – desegregation of interstate commerce, violence spurred JFK to action

Page 14: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

Major Battles Birmingham protests, 1963, Bull Connor’s violence

spurred JFK TV broadcast against racism and segregation

March on Washington, 1963, MLK’s “I Have a Dream” speech, garnered public support

M on W and JFK assassination = push for 1964 Civil Rights Act, outlawing discrimination in employment, equal access to public accommodations and schools

Freedom Summer, 1965, murders of volunteers, marches, voter registration in south, Selma march

Created pressure for Voting Rights Act of 1965 and 24th Const. Amend., both outlawed barring of black voters

Page 15: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

Civil Rights and the Democratic Party: Sympathies and Tensions

Case Study: MS Freedom Democrats and the 1964 Democratic Convention, Atlantic City, NJ

Fannie Lou Hamer, sharecropper turned SNCC civil rights activist

Went to SNCC meeting, tried to register to vote, kicked off plantation, beaten

Became fundraiser for SNCC and ran for Congress in MS, black votes not counted

Page 16: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

Hamer and MS Freedom Democrats challenged all-white MS Democratic Party and delegates to 1964 Dem. Convention

Failed to get seated, but spurred Voting Rights Act and changes within Democratic Party

Page 17: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

1960 Presidential Election

JFK =

Blue =

49.7% Nixon =

Red =

49.5%

Page 18: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

1964 Presidential Election

LBJ =

Blue =

61.1% Goldwater =

Red =

38.5%

Page 19: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

Presidential Civil Rights Pushed by civil rights movement Liberals attempted to live up to American

ideals (Truman, JFK, LBJ) Eisenhower, detached, but was pushed to act

at Little Rock JFK, overly cautious, was pushed to protect

protesters; optimism became spur to action LBJ, believed in racial equality

Pushed for Civil Rights Act (1964) and Voting Rights Act (1965)

Page 20: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

LBJ’s Great Society & War on Poverty Attention to “the other America” – those who had not

been able to share in postwar affluence: poor, working poor, African Am., Appalachia

LBJ used JFK assassination as reason to pursue social goals, continue JFK’s legacy

Great Society and War on Poverty: set of social programs to complete the New Deal Empowerment – Comm. Action Programs, Headstart,

Legal Services, VISTA Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security expanded (welfare),

public housing Affirmative Action rules, 1968 Community Action Programs used by blacks to fight for

political and social problems, not always the form or kind liberal whites wanted

Page 21: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

Conclusions Successes: framing of civil rights as moral, ethical

problem, full attainment of American ideals Attainment of legal desegregation and voting rights Pushing of Democratic Party to become party of civil

rights, justice, and equality Decrease in poverty rate, 1960-1970, 23%-15% Programs: Medicaid, Medicare, Headstart, Affirm.A. Questions:

Would de facto desegregation and civil rights be attained in north or south?

Would Democratic coalition remain intact? What impact would Vietnam War have on civil rights and

American politics?

Page 22: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

Civil Rights, Further Issues

Black Power, Stokely Carmichael:

Page 23: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

Civil Rights, Further Issues

Malcolm X:

Page 24: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

The New Left: Port Huron Statement, 1962

Page 25: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

Jerry Rubin, ‘Self-Portrait of a Child of Amerika,’ 1970I am a child of Amerika. If I'm ever sent to Death Row for my revolutionary "crimes," I'll order as my last meal: a hamburger, french fries and a Coke. I dig big cities. I love to read the sports pages and gossip columns, listen to the radio and watch color TV. I dig department stores, huge supermarkets and airports. I feel secure

(though not necessarily hungry) when I see Howard Johnson's on the expressway.

 I groove on Hollywood movies‑even bad ones. I speak only one language‑English.

Page 26: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

I love rock 'n' roll. I collected baseball players' cards when I was a kid and wanted to play

second base for the Cincinnati Reds, my home team. I got a car when I was sixteen after flunking my first driver's test and crying

for a week waiting to take it a second time. I went to the kind of high school where you had to pass a test to get in. I graduated in the bottom half of the class. My classmates voted me the "busiest" senior in the school. I had short, short, short hair. I dug Catcher in the Rye. I didn't have pimples.

Page 27: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

I became an ace young reporter for the Cincinnati Post and Times‑Star. "Son," the managing editor said to me, "someday you're going to be a helluva reporter, maybe the greatest reporter this city's ever seen."

 I loved Adlai Stevenson. My father drove a truck delivering bread and later became an organizer in

the Bakery Drivers' Union. He dug Jimmy Hoffa (so do I). He died of heart failure at fifty‑two.

 My mother had a college degree and played the piano. She died of cancer

at the age of fifty‑one. I took care of my brother, Gil, from the time he was thirteen. I dodged the draft. I went to Oberlin College for a year, graduated from the University of

Cincinnati, spent 1 1/2 years in Israel and started graduate school at Berkeley.

Page 28: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

I dropped out. I dropped out of the White Race and the Amerikan nation. I dig being free. I like getting high. I don't own a suit or tie. I live for the revolution. I'm a yippie! I am an orphan of Amerika.

Page 29: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

Common Enemies or Targets?

Page 30: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

Major Goals Empowerment Integration into mainstream American life Desegregation Respect and self-respect End of poverty End of racism and other forms of discrimination Mainstream Civil Rights Movement was part of

liberal movement Question: Could liberalism solve issues of civil

rights, poverty, and injustice?

Page 31: Civil Rights,  The Early Years

Factors in Success or Failure Recruitment: good slogan, appealing Persuasion Get media attention Inspire action/change Clarity of goals Good leadership Delegation of power, responsibility Money Decide on methods of action: violence, nonviolence,

etc. Change minds