The Civil Rights Movement 1954 - 1968 Today’s Lecture • Early Movement – Brown (1954) • Massive Resistance • Little Rock (1957) – Bus Boycott (1955) – Non-Violent Protest • March On Washington (1963) – Civil Rights Act (1964) • Action and Progress – Freedom Summer – Selma, AL (1965) – Voting Rights Act (1965) • Reaction – Black Power • Malcolm X – Black Panthers • Memphis (1968) • Continuation Brown vs. Board of Education, Topeka et al (1954) George E.C. Hayes, Thurgood Marshall, and James Nabrit, congratulating each other, following Supreme Court decision declaring segregation unconstitutional, 1954 • To be instituted “with all deliberate speed” Massive Resistance • Virginia Governor Harry F. Byrd • March 1856: Southern Manifesto – Signed by 101 Southern Senators • Not LBJ • Eisenhower wary of international situation but also white Southern votes Little Rock, Arkansas 1957 Montgomery Bus Boycott (1955) • Rosa Parks – Carefully planned ahead of time • Bus boycott lasts 381 days • MLK comes to public attention – 1957: Southern Christian Leadership Conference, Non-Violent Protest Greensboro’, NC 1960 March On Washington (August 1963) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3vDWWy4CMhE https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3vDWWy4CMhE The Civil Rights Act (1964) • Banned racial discrimination and segregation in public areas • Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) • Did not address statemandated voting restrictions The Early Movement • Multiple theories on success • Derrick A. Bell Jr: Interestconvergence theory – Grass roots combined with white momentum • Mary L. Dudziak: ‘Cold War Imperative’ theory – International situation spurred Federal action • Michael Klarman: Backlash - Massive Resistance spurred grass roots activism Freedom Summer • 1961: Mississippi Campaign – Student Non-violent Co-ordinating Committee (SNCC) led by Robert (Bob) Moses • Council of Federated Organizations (COFO) – NAACP/ SCLC/ SNCC/ CORE • 1964 Freedom Summer – Volunteers young, white, Jewish – Freedom murders - publicity • Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party (MFDP) and Democratic Convention Selma, Alabama (1965) • https://www.youtube.com/w atch?v=fG_2ZwFhnys • ‘Next great battle’ • Selma chosen as the location • March to Montgomery • Violently prevented • Peaceful 2nd March • Voting Rights Act (1965) • Prevented registration qualifications • 1m – 3.1m black southern voters by 1968 • 23 black office-holders – 1200 by 1972 MLK on the Defensive • 1965: FBI leaked stories about his private life • ‘Long hot summer’: 1965, then 1966, then 1967… – Watts Riot; Chicago Riot; Newark Riot; Detroit Riot – Spurred by disenchantment with the CRM – Did not receive equality • 1967: King came out against the Vietnam War • Rise of alternate methods Black Power • Dissatisfaction/ fracturing • Malcolm X – ‘if ballots don’t work, bullets will’ – Assassinated 21st Feb 1965 • 1966 SNCC and CORE adopted Black Nationalism – Advocated separatism – SNCC led by Stokely Carmichael, then by H. Rap Brown – ‘Violence is necessary and it’s as American as apple pie.’ - Brown The Black Panthers • 1966 BPs founded by Huey Newton and Bobby Seale, Oakland, CA – Encouraged black men to be like ‘panthers – smiling, cunning, scientific, striking by night and sparing no one’ • Involved in both social programs and police shootouts – High attrition rate • Death/ arrest – Splintered movement and black/ white alliance Memphis (April 4th 1968) • MLK supporting Garbage Workers’ strike • Killed on hotel balcony • Riots erupted in over 100 cities Mexico (1968) Continuation of the Struggle • Martin Luther King Jr National Monument, Washington DC • “Out of a mountain of despair, a stone of hope • 1964 Independence Ave • Unfinished, as is the movement Next week… The Vietnam War