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A Tale of Two Cities Atlanta and Birmingham respond to the Civil Rights Movement Lori Campanile and Lindsay Robinson

A Tale Of Two Cities

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Page 1: A Tale Of Two Cities

A Tale of Two Cities

Atlanta and Birmingham respond to the Civil Rights

Movement

Lori Campanile and Lindsay Robinson

Page 2: A Tale Of Two Cities

Atlanta and Birmingham

• Both cities have similar populations and importance up until about 1950

• Began to diverge in the mid 20th century• Develop different economies and

different imagesWhy did Atlanta and Birmingham

develop so differently?• What choices did city leaders make

that effected the future of each city?

Page 3: A Tale Of Two Cities

Atlanta

“Atlanta was in the South but not of the South.”

Page 4: A Tale Of Two Cities

Atlanta’s Population The City

White Black

• 1940   302,280 60% 40%

• 1960   487,455 54% 45%

• 1980   425,022 34% 66%

• 2000   416,474  37.7%   56.8%

Estimations leaving out other ethnic groups.

Page 5: A Tale Of Two Cities

Metropolitan Area1940 - 820,000 about 35% of whom are black.

1960 – 1,300,000 44% Black

1980- Population is just under 2 million 66% Black

By 2007- Atlanta has been the fastest growing metropolitan area in the nation since 2000, with a gain of nearly 900,000 residents to 5.1 million

Page 6: A Tale Of Two Cities

Atlanta: The City too Busy to Hate

• Is Atlanta’s ‘Progressive’ reputation overstated?

Atlanta’s business community chooses early on to comply with desegregation, but it was a grudging and long process. One example is the encouragement by the Chairman of Coca-Cola Robert Woodruff….

Page 7: A Tale Of Two Cities

The Coca Cola City

Page 8: A Tale Of Two Cities

Diverse is not Equal

• Atlanta experiences white flight and a growth of inner city ghettos

• One of the starkest examples is Atlanta’s schools

• Despite the level of development; Atlanta remains ‘segregated’.

• Atlanta is Progressive by comparison…to Birmingham!

Page 9: A Tale Of Two Cities

Conclusions on Atlanta

• Atlanta’s growth and economy accelerate past Birmingham’s especially 1970-2000

• The city’s early; albeit grudging acceptance of Civil Rights and growth of the Black Middle Class accounts for its accelerated development

• Perhaps the development of a sizable Black middle class but also an influx of non-Southern whites account for Atlanta’s development.

Page 10: A Tale Of Two Cities

Birmingham

Page 11: A Tale Of Two Cities

Birmingham Populations

White Black

• 1940    267,583   61% 39%

• 1960    340,887   60.3%         39.6%

• 1980    284,413   43.9%         55.6%

• 2000    242,840   24.1%         73.5% 

Page 12: A Tale Of Two Cities

The ‘Magic’ City

• The Big Mules control the city enforce the system of segregation though a near Oligarchy

• Industrial; mining base creates a large wealth disparity with a very small Black Middle Class.

• Birmingham becomes notorious for its brutal response to Civil Rights protests

Page 13: A Tale Of Two Cities

Bombingham

Page 14: A Tale Of Two Cities

Birmingham

Page 15: A Tale Of Two Cities
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Conclusions

• Atlanta and Birmingham develop different after the 1950s as a direct result of their different responses to the Civil Rights Movement

Page 17: A Tale Of Two Cities

Sources Cited• http://sos.georgia.gov/archives/tours/html/atlanta_history.html• http://www.atlantahighered.org/civilrights/• http://www.edutopia.org/diverse-not-equal• http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlanta

• 1. Carry Me Home   Birmingham, Alabama, The Climatic Battle of the Civil Rights Revolution  Diane McWhorter, Simon & Schuster, New York, 2001.

•  • 2. "Southern Exposure" Jon Wiener, The Nation, June 11, 2001.•  • 3. America Divided  The Civil War of the 1960s  Maurice Isserman and Michael Kazen, Oxford University Press, USA; 3 edition (February

28, 2007) .

• 4. "Family's Profits, Wrung from Blood and Sweat"  David Barstow and Lowell Bergman, New York Times, January 9, 2003.

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