The American 1955-1965 Civil Rights Movement
The 1955-1965 Civil Rights Movement cause the agreement of the Civil rights Act, but the African Americans did not fully receive racial justice straight away. The Civil Rights Movement was at its highest involvement from 1955-1965. The Congress passed the Civil Rights Act in 1964 and the Voting Rights Act in 1865. These Acts were to give basic civil rights for all Americans, regardless of race, after a decade of non-violent protests and marches ranging from bus boycotts to student-led-sit-ins. The steps taken for African Americans equality were simple, as whites didn’t fully commit to the Civil Rights Act, but it was a starting point for racial justice for all Americans.Before the Civil Rights Movement there were secret societies to keep the blacks in their place. This type of attitude flourished throughout the southern states. In 1971 several African American officials in South Carolina were given 15 days to resign. If they refused, “retributive justice [would] as surely be used as night follows day”[John Cantwell, 1994, (p) 322]. During 1882 and 1910 there was an average of 150 lynching a year in the South and countless beatings. With these acts taking place, African Americans were eager to get racial justice by creating the
. . .
Some common words found in the essay are:
African Americans, Park Fifty, King Jr, Civil Rights, African American, Rosa Parks, Rights Movement, Birmingham Manifesto, Rights Act, South Carolina, civil rights, african americans, racial justice, rights act, african american, civil rights act, rights movement, civil rights movement, civil rights bill, martin luther, increase african, rights bill, king jr, martin luther king, luther king jr,
Approximate Word count = 1391
Approximate Pages = 6 (250 words per page double spaced)
|
 |