Civil rights

Key Events in the American Civil Right Movement: 1954-1968

By 4flora
  • Urban Migration of Blacks

    Urban Migration of Blacks
    During the period of 1954 over 65% of blacks had migrated to urban areas. This was the culmination of the Great Migration with the first time in history where the majority of blacks resided outside of the south.
  • Brown V The Board of Education of Topeka

    Brown V The Board of Education of Topeka
    A landmark case which reversed Plessy v. Ferguson declaring "separate but equal" in the public schools as unconstituional.
  • Montgomery Bus Boycott

    Montgomery Bus Boycott
    Rosa Parks refuses to give up her bus seat to a white passenger this marks the beginning of a year long boycott of the Montgomery Alabama buses. This event thrusts Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. from relative obsucrity to national prominence.
  • Segregation of Buses is Ruled Unconstitional

    Segregation of  Buses is Ruled Unconstitional
  • SCLC is Established

    SCLC is Established
    Reverend Dr, Martin Luther King, Charles K. Steele and Fred L. Shuttlesworth found the Southern Christian Leadership Conference with Dr. King as its president. The organization became a major force in the civil rights movment and in the area of non violence resistance and civil disobedience.
  • Integration of Little Rock Central High School

    Integration of Little Rock Central High School
    Nine black students are barred from entering the all white Central High School. President Eisnehower utilized the National Guard and federal troops to force integration. The group of students are known as the "Little Rock Nine".
  • Lunch Counter Sit In - Greensboro, North Carolina

    Lunch Counter Sit In - Greensboro, North Carolina
    Four black students from North Carolina Agricultural and Technical College participated in a sit-in at a segregated Woolworth's lunch counter. This initiated similar protests throughout the South.
  • Period: to

    Albany Movoemnt

  • Freedom Rides

    Freedom Rides
    During the spring and summer of 1961 students ride buses to challenge and test the laws that prohibit segregation in interstate bus and railway stations. This movment was sponsored by The Congress of Racial Equality (CORE).
  • Dr. King Jailed in BIrmingham- "Letter from Birmingham Jail"

    Dr. King Jailed in BIrmingham- "Letter from Birmingham Jail"
  • Police Violence used towards protesters in BIrhiimgham, Alabama

    Police Violence used towards protesters in BIrhiimgham, Alabama
    In the midst of civil rights protests in BIrmingham, Alabama, Commisioner of Public Safety Eugene CConner releases fire hoses and police dogs on the protesters. This drew international media attention to the civil rights movment.
  • Medgar Evers Assasination

    Medgar Evers Assasination
    NAACP Mississippi's Field Secretary is murdered .
  • March on Washington

    March on Washington
    Greater than 200,00 blacks and whites arrive at the Lincoln Memorial for the MArch on Washington. A highlight of the event was Dr. King's "I Have a Dream Speech".
  • Bombing of Birmingham Church

    Bombing of Birmingham Church
    Four young girls were killed during Sunday School at the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church when a bomb exploded. The church had been a popular meeting place for the civil rights movement.
  • The 24th Amendment abolishes Poll Tax

    The 24th Amendment abolishes Poll Tax
  • Civil Rights Act Signed

    Civil Rights Act Signed
    The Civil Right Act of 1964 was one of the most comprehensive civil rights legislature since the Reconstruction. It prohibited any discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion or national origin. It also granted the federal government the right to enforce desegregation.
  • Dr. King awarded Nobel Peace Prize

    Dr. King awarded Nobel Peace Prize
  • Assassination of Malcolm X

    Assassination of Malcolm X
    Black nationalist and the founder fo the organization of Afro- American Unity is murdered.
  • Bloody Sunday- Selma to Montgomery March

    Bloody Sunday- Selma to Montgomery March
    Dr. King led a 54 mile march in support of voter registration but police stopped them at the Pettus Bridge. The media names the event "Bloody Sunday" because of the police brutality which led to the hospitilization of fifty marcher due to the use of whips, gas and clubs. This was the spark that led to President Johnson's address to the nation in support of the marchers and the catalyst for the passage of the voting rights bill.
  • Voting Rights Acts Passed

    Voting Rights Acts Passed
    Literacy tests, poll taxes and several other restrictions were deemed illegal allowing blacks to vote.
  • Black Panthers Founded

    Black Panthers Founded
  • Sanitation Workers Strike- Memphis

    Sanitation Workers Strike- Memphis
  • The Assassination of Dr. King

    The Assassination of Dr. King
    While in Memphis, Tenn. in support of the sanitation workers strike Dr. King is shot and killed by James Earl Ray. This led to mass riots throughout the nation.
  • Civil Rights Act of 1968 Signed

    Civil Rights Act of 1968 Signed
    President Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1968. This abolishes discrimination in the sale, rental and financing of housing.