Challenging Segregation and New Civil Rights Issues

By 109904
  • Sit In Movement

    Sit In Movement
    In the fall of 1959, four young African Americans—Joseph McNeil, Ezell Blair, Jr., David Richmond, and Franklin McCain—enrolled at North Carolina Agricultural and Technical College, an African American college in Greensboro. The four freshmen often talked about the civil rights movement. In January 1960, McNeil suggested a sit-in. “All of us were afraid,” Richmond later recalled. “But we went and did it.”
  • Freedom Riders

    Freedom Riders
    Teams of African American and white volunteers who became known as Freedom Riders boarded several southbound interstate buses. Buses were met by angry white mobs in Anniston, Birmingham, and Montgomery, Alabama. The mobs slashed bus tires and threw rocks at the windows. In Anniston, someone threw a firebomb into one bus. Fortunately, no one was killed. In Birmingham, riders emerged from a bus to face a gang of young white men armed with baseball bats, chains, and lead pipes.
  • March On Washington

    March On Washington
    Civil rights leaders kept the pressure on legislators and the president by planning a large-scale march on Washington. More than 250,000 demonstrators, African American and white, gathered near the Lincoln Memorial. They heard speeches and sang songs. Dr. King then delivered a powerful speech calling for freedom and equality for all Americans.
  • The Selma March

    The Selma March
    The SCLC and Dr. King selected Selma, Alabama, as the focal point for their campaign for voting rights. Although African Americans made up a majority of Selma’s population, they made up only 3 percent of registered voters.Sheriff Jim Clark had deputized and armed dozens of white citizens. His posse terrorized African Americans. On one occasion, they even used clubs and cattle prods on them. King’s demonstrations in Selma led to the arrest of more than 3,000 African Americans.
  • MLK's Death

    MLK's Death
    As he stood on his hotel balcony in Memphis, Dr. King was assassinated by a sniper. Dr. King’s death touched off both national mourning and riots in more than 100 cities, including Washington, D.C. The Reverend Ralph Abernathy, who had served as a trusted assistant to Dr. King for many years, led the Poor People’s Campaign in King’s absence.
  • Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee

    Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee
    Urged on by former NAACP official and SCLC executive director Ella Baker, students established the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) in 1960. African American college students from all across the South made up the majority of SNCC’s members. Many whites also joined. SNCC became an important civil rights group.Volunteer Robert Moses urged the SNCC to start helping rural Southern African Americans, who often faced violence if they tried to register to vote.