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civil rights timeline

  • Plessy V Ferguson

    Plessy V Ferguson
    The lone dissenting voice in the Plessy v. Ferguson decision was John Marshall Harlan. Harlan is an interesting character. He and his family had owned slaves in Kentucky, and during the Civil War he staunchly defended the right to slavery. At the same time, however, he also joined the Union Army to fight to preserve the Union. After the Civil War ended, he changed his attitude on slavery and became a staunch critic of it and defender of civil rights for African-Americans.
  • NAACP

    NAACP
    the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People was one of the earliest and most influential civil rights organization in the United States.the NAACP focused on legal strategies designed to confront the critical civil rights issues of the day. They called for federal anti-lynching laws and coordinated a series of challenges to state-sponsored segregation in public schools, an effort that led to the landmark 1954 Supreme Court decision in Brown v. Board Education.
  • Brown v. Board

    Brown v. Board
    the Court unanimously ruled that "separate but equal" public schools for blacks and whites were unconstitutional. The Brown case served as a catalyst for the modern civil rights movement, inspiring education reform everywhere and forming the legal means of challenging segregation in all areas of society.
  • Emmett TIll Murder

    Emmett TIll Murder
    Roy Bryant, Carolyn's husband, and his half brother J.W. Milam kidnapped Till from Moses Wright's home. They then beat the teenager brutally, dragged him to the bank of the Tallahatchie River, shot him in the head, tied him with barbed wire to a large metal fan and shoved his mutilated body into the water. Moses Wright reported Till's disappearance to the local authorities, and three days later his corpse was pulled out of the river.
  • Montgomery Bus Boycott

     Montgomery Bus Boycott
    an African-American woman, refused to yield her seat to a white man on a Montgomery bus. She was arrested and fined. The boycott of public buses by blacks in Montgomery began on the day of Parks’ court hearing and lasted 381 days. The U.S. Supreme Court ultimately ordered Montgomery to integrate its bus system, and one of the leaders of the boycott, a young pastor named Martin Luther King Jr. emerged as a prominent national leader of the American civil rights.
  • Crisis in Little Rock

    Crisis in Little Rock
    as a result of that ruling, nine African-American students enrolled at Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas. The ensuing struggle between segregationists and integrationists, the State of Arkansas and the federal government, President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Arkansas Governor Orval Faubus, has become known in modern American history as the "Little Rock Crisis." The crisis gained world-wide attention.
  • Freedom SUmmer

    Freedom SUmmer
    The Mississippi project did establish fifty Freedom Schools to carry on community organizing, but it managed to register only twelve hundred Afro-Americans. Another blow came in August when, with the acquiescence of party liberals and civil rights leaders. The Democratic National Convention refused to seat a protest slate of delegates elected through COFO’s Mississippi Freedom Democratic party.
  • Civil RIghts Act

    Civil RIghts Act
    protect individuals' freedom from infringement by governments, social organizations and private individuals, and which ensure one's ability to participate in the civil and political life of the society and state without discrimination or repression.It also involved the use of applied nonviolence to assure that equal rights guaranteed under the US Constitution would apply to all citizens.
  • 1967 Race RIots

    1967 Race RIots
    The 1967 Detroit riot, also known as the 12th Street riot.It began on a Saturday night in the early morning hours of July 23, 1967. The precipitating event was a police raid of an unlicensed, after-hours bar then known as a blind pig, on the corner of 12th (today Rosa Parks Boulevard) and Clairmount streets on the city's Near West Side
  • Civil Rights act of 1968

    Civil Rights act of 1968
    known as the Fair Housing Act–prohibited discrimination concerning the sale, rental and financing of housing based on race, religion, national origin