Civil Rights Movement
In
December 1955, in Montgomery, Alabama, a black woman named Rosa Parks
insisted on sitting in the front of a bus. The segregation laws in
America's deep south reserved the front section of public buses for
whites (although most bus passengers in Montgomery were blacks and the
front section was often almost empty).
Rosa Parks was arrested (pictured at right) and jailed,
which led to mass protests and a boycott of the buses, led by local
black minister Martin Luther King. Despite the Supreme Court's ruling
that segregation was unconstitutional in 1954, Alabama's white
officials avoided integrating schools until 1963.
In September 1957 Governor Faubus of Arkansas used National
Guardsmen to prevent nine black schoolchildren from entering the high
school in Little Rock. President Eisenhower sent more than 1,000
Federal troops to escort the children to the school.
A group of anti-racist campaigners calling themselves the "freedom
riders" toured the southern United States traveling on bus services
to test whether Federal orders to integrate public transport were
being obeyed. The group met with violent opposition, with some of the
ugliest scenes taking place in the town of Montgomery, capital of
Alabama, where white segregationists (who included members of the
notorious Ku Klux Klan) tried to burn and block the path of buses, and
attacked freedom riders with clubs.
Attorney-General Robert Kennedy sent Federal marshals to
Montgomery, where the Rev. Dr Martin Luther
King had pledged to
continue the struggle for equal rights. Dr King insisted that "passive
resistance and the weapons of love" were the most effective means of
fighting bigotry and racism. In 1962, Federal troops were called out
again, this time to escort James H Meredith when he became the first
black student to enroll at the University of Mississippi. Meredith's
entrance was blocked by State Troopers who were sent by Governor Ross
Barnett. President John F Kennedy, however, ordered the Federal
marshals to escort Meredith safely to class.
Two
men were killed and 50 people were injured in the ensuing riots as
angry whites, stirred up by Barnett's actions, stormed the university
in protest against Meredith's admission. 3,000 Federal soldiers were
eventually used to quell the riots.
On August 28 1963, over 250,000 people walked the streets of
Washington and gathered at the Lincoln Memorial in the biggest civil
rights march to date. The Rev. Dr Martin Luther
King delivered a
speech to the gathering which included the likes of Judy Garland,
Marlon Brando, Burt Lancaster and Bob
Dylan.
President John F Kennedy said that Dr Luther King's actions and
that of other activists had speeded up the "cause of 20 million
Negroes", and henceforth undertook a great deal of work towards civil
rights reform, and following his assassination in 1963, his work was
continued by Lyndon B Johnson who worked hard to ensure Congress did
not dilute the proposed reforms.
On July 2 1964 President Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of
1964, the most radical civil
rights law in US history. The Act
prohibited racial discrimination in employment, public facilities,
places of public accommodation, union membership and Federal funded
programs.
Black nationalist leader Malcolm X was shot dead at a rally for the
OAAU (Organization of Afro-American Unity) in New York City on
February 21 1965. The gunmen, one of whom was caught, were connected
with a group called the Black Muslims - the sect in which Malcolm X
was formerly a leading figure.
Some black Americans began to seek new solutions to continuing
injustice and poverty. In Oakland, California, Huey Newton and Bobby
Seale founded a new political organization, The Black
Panthers. The
Panthers aimed to protect the ghetto community from racist police, but
also hoped to organize clinics, community centers and free breakfast
schemes. Their violent language disturbed many of the older
campaigners for black rights, but it reflected a new attitude among
young black Americans.
The
Black Panthers were part of the growing "Black Power" movement - a
phrase originally coined by black leader Stokely Carmichael. Instead
of trying hard to be accepted by white American society, Black Power
supporters wanted revolutionary change in the USA. The growing fashion
for natural afro hairstyles was an indication of the popularity of the
new militancy.
On April 4 1968, revered Civil Rights leader
Martin Luther King was
assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee. Across the United States, black
Americans took to the streets in grief and rage, while riots broke out
in167 cities and on innumerable campuses.
Later that year, black American athletes Tommie Smith and John
Carlos used the Olympic Games in Mexico City to protest about racism
in the USA. As they received their medals for the 200 meter sprint,
gold medallist Smith and bronze medallist Carlos raised their
black-gloved clenched fists high above their heads in a salute
identified with Black Power. |