1960s and public protests

  • DEC 1, 1955

    On December 1st 1955 African American historical figure Rosa Parks refused to give her seat up for a white man on a public bus, her subsequent arrest initiated a sustained bus boycott in Montgomery, Alabama.
  • DEC 5, 1955

    The protest began on December 5, led by Martin Luther King, Jr., then a young local pastor, and was so successful that it was extended indefinitely. In the ensuing months, protestors faced threats, arrests, and termination from their jobs. Nonetheless, the boycott continued for more than a year.
  • MAY 17, 1954

    On May 17, 1954, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in the case Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka that racial segregation in public schools was unconstitutional.
  • DEC 20, 1956

    the Supreme Court upheld a lower court’s ruling that segregated seating was unconstitutional, and the federal decision went into effect on December 20, 1956.
  • 1957

    In September 1957 nine African American students attended their first day at Little Rock Central High School, whose entire student population had until that point been white. The Little Rock Nine, as they came to be called, encountered a large white mob and soldiers from the Arkansas National Guard.
  • 1963

    Opposition to US military involvement in Southeast Asia began in the 1950s and started to attract media attention in 1963 as the Kennedy Administration pushed combat troops into Vietnam.
  • 1966

    As antiwar protests grow, Johnson and American military leaders increase reliance on "search-and-destroy" missions in an effort to draw the Viet Cong into battles and inflict heavy casualties. But the Viet Cong prove difficult to pin down. By year's end, 6,000 American soldiers have died.
  • MAY 16, 1966

    MAY 16, 1966
  • 1967

    Ramparts magazine publishes photographs of Vietnamese children burned by napalm, spurring the involvement of Martin Luther King Jr., who will publicly denounce the war at a speech in New York in April.
  • 1973

    a group of men who had served in the conflict and called themselves the Vietnam Veterans Against the War. America's combat role in Vietnam came to an official end with the peace agreement signed in early 1973.