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The Civil Rights Movement
        Harlem Renaissance
        Segregation
        School Desegregation
        The Montgomery Bus Boycott
        Sit-Ins
        Freedom Riders
        Desegregating Southern Universities
        The March on Washington
        Voter Registration
        The End of the Movement
Harlem Renaissance
   The Harlem
    Renaissance was
    an African
    American cultural
    movement of the
    1920s and early
    1930s centered
    around the Harlem
    neighborhood of
    New York City.
                        [Grocery store, Harlem, 1940]
                        Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division
                        Washington, D.C.; LC-USZC4-4737
Harlem Renaissance
   The Harlem Renaissance marked the first time
    that mainstream publishers and critics took
    African American literature seriously and African
    American arts attracted significant attention from
    the nation at large.
   Instead of more direct political means, African
    American artists and writers used culture to work
    for the goals of civil rights and equality.
   African American writers intended to express
    themselves freely, no matter what the public
    thought.
Harlem Renaissance

   Several factors laid the groundwork for the
    movement.
   During a phenomenon known as the Great
    Migration, hundreds of thousands of African
    Americans moved from the economically
    depressed rural South to the industrial cities
    of the North, taking advantage of
    employment opportunities created by World
    War I.
Harlem Renaissance
   Increased education and employment
    opportunities following World War I led to
    the development of an African American
    middle class.
   As more and more educated and socially
    conscious African Americans settled in New
    York’s neighborhood of Harlem, it
    developed into the political and cultural
    center of black America.
Harlem Renaissance
   African American literature and arts surged
    in the early 1900s.
   Jazz and blues music moved with the
    African American populations from the
    South and Midwest into the bars and
    cabarets of Harlem.
   This generation of African Americans artists,
    writers, and performers refused to let the
    reality of racism and discrimination in the
    United States keep them from pursuing their
    goals.
Harlem Renaissance
   In the autumn of 1926, a group of young
    African American writers produced Fire!, a
    literary magazine.
   With Fire! a new generation of young
    writers and artists, including Langston
    Hughes, Wallace Thurman, and Zora Neale
    Hurston, took ownership of the literary
    Renaissance.
Harlem Renaissance
   No common literary style or political
    ideology defined the Harlem Renaissance.
    What united the participants was the sense
    of taking part in a common endeavor and
    their commitment to giving artistic
    expression to the African American
    experience.
   Some common themes did exist, however.
    An interest in the roots of the twentieth-
    century African American experience in
    Africa and the American South was one
    such theme.
Harlem Renaissance
   There was a strong sense of racial pride
    and a desire for social and political equality
    among the participants.
   The most characteristic aspect of the
    Harlem Renaissance was the diversity of its
    expression.
   From the mid-1920s through the mid-1930s,
    about 16 African American writers published
    over 50 volumes of poetry and fiction, while
    dozens of other African American artists
    made their mark in painting, music, and
    theater.
Harlem Renaissance
   The diverse literary
    expression of the
    Harlem Renaissance
    was demonstrated
    through Langston
    Hughes’s weaving of
    the rhythms of African
    American music into
    his poems of ghetto
    life, as in The Weary    Langston Hughes

    Blues (1926).            Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, FSA/OWI
                             Collection, [reproduction number, e.g., LC-USF34-9058-C]
Harlem Renaissance
   Diversity was also
    demonstrated through
    Zora Neale Hurston’s
    novels such as, Their
    Eyes Were Watching
    God (1937). Hurston
    used life of the rural
    South to create a
    study of race and        [Portrait of Zora Neale Hurston]
                             Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs

    gender in which a        Division, Carl Van Vechten Collection,
                             [reproduction number, e.g., LC-USZ62-54231]


    woman finds her true
    identity.
Harlem Renaissance

   Diversity and
    experimentation
    also flourished in
    the performing arts
    and were reflected
    in blues by such
    people as Bessie
    Smith and in jazz     [Portrait of Bessie Smith holding feathers]

    by such people as     Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, Carl Van
                          Vechten Collection, [reproduction number, e.g., LC-USZ62-
                          54231]

    Duke Ellington.
Harlem Renaissance
   Jazz styles ranged
    from the combination
    of blues and ragtime
    by pianist Jelly Role
    Morton to the
    instrumentation of
    bandleader Louis
    Armstrong and the
    orchestration of        New York, New York. Duke Ellington's trumpet section

    composer Duke           Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, FSA/OWI
                            Collection, [reproduction number, e.g., LC-USF34-9058-C]

    Ellington.
Harlem Renaissance
   The Harlem Renaissance pushed open the
    door for many African American authors to
    mainstream white periodicals and publishing
    houses.
   Harlem’s cabarets attracted both Harlem
    residents and white New Yorkers seeking
    out Harlem nightlife.
   Harlem’s famous Cotton Club carried this to
    an extreme, providing African American
    entertainment for exclusively white
    audiences.
Harlem Renaissance
   A number of factors contributed to the
    decline of the Harlem Renaissance in the
    mid-1930s.
   During the Great Depression of the
    1930s, organizations such as the NAACP
    and the National Urban League, which had
    actively promoted the Renaissance in the
    1920s, shifted their focus to economic and
    social issues.
Harlem Renaissance
   Many influential African American writers and
    literary promoters, including Langston Hughes,
    James Weldon Johnson, and W.E.B. Du Bois,
    left New York City in the early 1930s.
   The final blow to the Renaissance occurred
    when a riot broke out in Harlem in 1935. The
    riot was set off, in part, by the growing
    economic hardship brought on by the
    Depression and by mounting tension between
    the African American community and the white
    shop owners in Harlem.
Harlem Renaissance

   In spite of these problems, the Renaissance
    did not end overnight.
   Almost one-third of the books published
    during the Renaissance appeared after
    1929.
   The Harlem Renaissance permanently
    altered the dynamics of African American art
    and literature in the United States.
Harlem Renaissance
   The existence of
    the large amount of
    literature from the
    Renaissance
    inspired writers
    such as Ralph
    Ellison and Richard
    Wright to pursue
    literary careers in
                          New York, New York. Portrait of Richard Wright,
    the late 1930s and    poet
                          Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division,
    1940s.                FSA/OWI Collection, [reproduction number, e.g.,
                          LC-USF34-9058-C]
Harlem Renaissance
   The writers that followed the Harlem
    Renaissance found that American
    publishers and the American public were
    more open to African American literature
    than they had been at the beginning of the
    twentieth century.
   The outpouring of African American
    literature in the 1980s and 1990s by such
    writers as Alice Walker, Toni Morrison, and
    Spike Lee had its roots in the writing of the
    Harlem Renaissance.
Segregation
   The civil rights movement was a political, legal, and
    social struggle to gain full citizenship rights for
    African Americans.
   The civil rights movement was first and foremost a
    challenge to segregation, the system of laws and
    customs separating African Americans and whites.
   During the movement, individuals and civil rights
    organizations challenged segregation and
    discrimination with a variety of activities, including
    protest marches, boycotts, and refusal to abide by
    segregation laws.
Segregation

   Segregation was an attempt by many white
    Southerners to separate the races in every
    aspect of daily life.
   Segregation was often called the Jim Crow
    system, after a minstrel show character from
    the 1830s who was an African American
    slave who embodied negative stereotypes
    of African Americans.
Segregation
   Segregation
    became common in
    Southern states
    following the end of
    Reconstruction in
    1877. These states
    began to pass local
    and state laws that
    specified certain
    places “For Whites
    Only” and others       Drinking fountain on county courthouse lawn, Halifax, North
                           Carolina;


    for “Colored.”
                           Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, FSA/OWI
                           Collection, [reproduction number, e.g., LC-USF34-9058-C]
Segregation
   African Americans had
    separate schools,
    transportation,
    restaurants, and parks,
    many of which were poorly
    funded and inferior to
    those of whites.
   Over the next 75 years,
    Jim Crow signs to             Negro going in colored entrance of movie house on
                                  Saturday afternoon, Belzoni, Mississippi Delta, Mississippi

    separate the races went       Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division,
                                  FSA/OWI Collection, [reproduction number, e.g., LC-
                                  USF34-9058-C]
    up in every possible place.
Segregation

   The system of segregation also included the
    denial of voting rights, known as
    disenfranchisement.
   Between 1890 and 1910, all Southern states
    passed laws imposing requirements for
    voting. These were used to prevent African
    Americans from voting, in spite of the
    Fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution of
    the United States, which had been designed
    to protect African American voting rights.
Segregation

   The voting requirements included the ability
    to read and write, which disqualified many
    African Americans who had not had access
    to education; property ownership, which
    excluded most African Americans, and
    paying a poll tax, which prevented most
    Southern African Americans from voting
    because they could not afford it.
Segregation
   Conditions for African Americans in the
    Northern states were somewhat better,
    though up to 1910 only ten percent of
    African Americans lived in the North.
   Segregated facilities were not as common in
    the North, but African Americans were
    usually denied entrance to the best hotels
    and restaurants.
   African Americans were usually free to vote
    in the North.
Segregation

   Perhaps the most difficult part of Northern
    life was the economic discrimination against
    African Americans. They had to compete
    with large numbers of recent European
    immigrants for job opportunities, and they
    almost always lost because of their race.
Segregation

   In the late 1800s, African Americans sued to
    stop separate seating in railroad cars,
    states’ disfranchisement of voters, and
    denial of access to schools and restaurants.
   One of the cases against segregated rail
    travel was Plessy v. Ferguson (1896), in
    which the Supreme Court of the United
    States ruled that “separate but equal”
    accommodations were constitutional.
Segregation

   In order to protest segregation, African
    Americans created national organizations.
   The National Afro-American League was
    formed in 1890; W.E.B. Du Bois helped
    create the Niagara Movement in 1905 and
    the National Association for the
    Advancement of Colored People (NAACP)
    in 1909.
Segregation

   In 1910, the National Urban League was
    created to help African Americans make the
    transition to urban, industrial life.
   In 1942, the Congress of Racial Equality
    (CORE) was founded to challenge
    segregation in public accommodations in
    the North.
Segregation
   The NAACP
    became one of the
    most important
    African American
    organizations of the
    twentieth century. It
    relied mainly on
    legal strategies that
    challenged
    segregation and         20th Annual session of the N.A.A.C.P., 6-26-29, Cleveland, Ohio
                            Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C.; LC-
    discrimination in       USZ62-111535



    the courts.
Segregation
   Historian and
    sociologist W.E.B.
    Du Bois was a
    founder and leader of
    the NAACP. Starting
    in 1910, he made
    powerful arguments
    protesting
    segregation as editor
    of the NAACP            [Portrait of Dr. W.E.B. Du Bois]

    magazine The Crisis.    Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, Carl Van
                            Vechten Collection, [reproduction number, e.g., LC-USZ62-
                            54231]
School Desegregation
   After World War II, the
    NAACP’s campaign
    for civil rights
    continued to proceed.
   Led by Thurgood
    Marshall, the NAACP
    Legal Defense Fund
    challenged and
    overturned many
    forms of
    discrimination.           Thurgood Marshall
School Desegregation

   The main focus of the NAACP turned to
    equal educational opportunities.
   Marshall and the Defense Fund worked with
    Southern plaintiffs to challenge the Plessy
    decision, arguing that separate was
    inherently unequal.
   The Supreme Court of the United States
    heard arguments on five cases that
    challenged elementary and secondary
    school segregation.
School Desegregation
   In May 1954, the Court
    issued its landmark ruling
    in Brown v. Board of
    Education of Topeka,
    stating racially segregated
    education was
    unconstitutional and
    overturning the Plessy
    decision.                     Desegregate the schools! Vote Socialist Workers :
                                  Peter Camejo for president, Willie Mae Reid for vice-
                                  president.

   White Southerners were        Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division
                                  Washington, D.C.; LC-USZ62-101452


    shocked by the Brown
    decision.
School Desegregation

   By 1955, white opposition in the South had
    grown into massive resistance, using a
    strategy to persuade all whites to resist
    compliance with the desegregation orders.
   Tactics included firing school employees
    who showed willingness to seek integration,
    closing public schools rather than
    desegregating, and boycotting all public
    education that was integrated.
School Desegregation
   Virtually no schools in the South segregated
    their schools in the first years following the
    Brown decision.
   In Virginia, one county actually closed its
    public schools.
   In 1957, Governor Orval Faubus defied a
    federal court order to admit nine African
    American students to Central High School in
    Little Rock, Arkansas.
   President Dwight Eisenhower sent federal
    troops to enforce desegregation.
School Desegregation
   The event was covered by the national media,
    and the fate of the nine students attempting to
    integrate the school gripped the nation.
   Not all school desegregation was as dramatic
    as Little Rock schools gradually desegregated.
   Often, schools were desegregated only in
    theory because racially segregated
    neighborhoods led to segregated schools.
   To overcome the problem, some school
    districts began busing students to schools
    outside their neighborhoods in the 1970s.
School Desegregation

   As desegregation continued, the membership
    of the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) grew.
   The KKK used violence or threats against
    anyone who was suspected of favoring
    desegregation or African American civil rights.
   Ku Klux Klan terror, including intimidation and
    murder, was widespread in the South during
    the 1950s and 1960s, though Klan activities
    were not always reported in the media.
The Montgomery Bus Boycott

   Despite threats and violence, the civil rights
    movement quickly moved beyond school
    desegregation to challenge segregation in
    other areas.
   In December 1955, Rosa Parks, a member
    of the Montgomery, Alabama, branch of the
    NAACP, was told to give up her seat on a
    city bus to a white person.
The Montgomery Bus Boycott
   When Parks refused
    to move, she was
    arrested.
   The local NAACP,
    led by Edgar D.
    Nixon, recognized
    that the arrest of
                           Woman fingerprinted. Mrs. Rosa Parks, Negro seamstress,
    Parks might rally      whose refusal to move to the back of a bus touched off the bus
                           boycott in Montgomery, Ala.

    local African          Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division
                           Washington, D.C.; LC-USZ62-109643

    Americans to protest
    segregated buses.
The Montgomery Bus Boycott
   Montgomery’s African American community
    had long been angry about their
    mistreatment on city buses where white
    drivers were rude and abusive.
   The community had previously considered a
    boycott of the buses and overnight one was
    organized.
   The bus boycott was an immediate success,
    with almost unanimous support from the
    African Americans in Montgomery.
The Montgomery Bus Boycott
   The boycott lasted for more than a year,
    expressing to the nation the determination
    of African Americans in the South to end
    segregation.
   In November 1956, a federal court ordered
    Montgomery’s buses desegregated and the
    boycott ended in victory.
The Montgomery Bus Boycott

   A Baptist minister named Martin Luther
    King, Jr., was president of the Montgomery
    Improvement Association, the organization
    that directed the boycott.
   His involvement in the protest made him a
    national figure. Through his eloquent
    appeals to Christian brotherhood and
    American idealism he attracted people both
    inside and outside the South.
The Montgomery Bus Boycott
   King became the president of the Southern
    Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC)
    when it was founded in 1957.
   The SCLC complemented the NAACP’s
    legal strategy by encouraging the use of
    nonviolent, direct action to protest
    segregation. These activities included
    marches, demonstrations, and boycotts.
   The harsh white response to African
    Americans’ direct action eventually forced
    the federal government to confront the issue
    of racism in the South.
Sit-Ins
   On February 1, 1960,
    four African American
    college students from
    North Carolina A&T
    University began
    protesting racial
    segregation in
    restaurants by sitting
    at “White Only” lunch    Sit-ins in a Nashville store

    counters and waiting     Library of Congress Prints and Photographs
                             Division Washington, D.C.; LC-USZ62-126236

    to be served.
Sit-Ins
   This was not a new form of protest, but the
    response to the sit-ins spread throughout
    North Carolina, and within weeks sit-ins
    were taking place in cities across the South.
   Many restaurants were desegregated in
    response to the sit-ins.
   This form of protest demonstrated clearly to
    African Americans and whites alike that
    young African Americans were determined
    to reject segregation.
Sit-Ins
   In April 1960, the Student Nonviolent
    Coordinating Committee (SNCC) was
    founded in Raleigh, North Carolina, to help
    organize and direct the student sit-in
    movement.
   King encouraged SNCC’s creation, but the
    most important early advisor to the students
    was Ella Baker, who worked for both the
    NAACP and SCLC.
Sit-Ins

   Baker believed that SNCC
    civil rights activities should
    be based in individual
    African American
    communities.
   SNCC adopted Baker’s
    approach and focused on          [Ella Baker, head-and-shoulders
                                     portrait, facing slightly left]

    making changes in local          Library of Congress Prints and
                                     Photographs Division Washington,
                                     D.C.; LC-USZ62-110575
    communities, rather than
    striving for national change.
Freedom Riders

   After the sit-in movement, some SNCC
    members participated in the 1961 Freedom
    Rides organized by CORE.
   The Freedom Riders, both African American
    and white, traveled around the South in
    buses to test the effectiveness of a 1960
    U.S. Supreme Court decision declaring
    segregation illegal in bus stations open to
    interstate travel.
Freedom Riders
   The Freedom Rides began in Washington, D.C.
    Except for some violence in Rock Hill, South
    Carolina, the trip was peaceful until the buses
    reached Alabama, where violence erupted.
   In Anniston, Alabama, one bus was burned and
    some riders were beaten.
   In Birmingham, a mob attacked the riders when
    they got off the bus.
   The riders suffered even more severe beatings
    in Montgomery.
Freedom Riders
   The violence brought national attention to
    the Freedom Riders and fierce
    condemnation of Alabama officials for
    allowing the brutality to occur.
   The administration of President John F.
    Kennedy stepped in to protect the Freedom
    Riders when it was clear that Alabama
    officials would not guarantee their safe
    travel.
Freedom Riders

   The riders continued on to Jackson,
    Mississippi, where they were arrested and
    imprisoned at the state penitentiary, ending
    the protest.
   The Freedom Rides did result in the
    desegregation of some bus stations, but
    more importantly they caught the attention
    of the American public.
Desegregating Southern Universities

   In 1962, James Meredith—an African
    American—applied for admission to the
    University of Mississippi.
   The university attempted to block Meredith’s
    admission, and he filed suit.
   After working through the state courts, Meredith
    was successful when a federal court ordered the
    university to desegregate and accept Meredith
    as a student.
Desegregating Southern Universities
   The Governor of Mississippi, Ross Barnett, defied
    the court order and tried to prevent Meredith from
    enrolling.
   In response, the administration of President
    Kennedy intervened to uphold the court order.
    Kennedy sent federal troops to protect Meredith
    when he went to enroll.
   During his first night on campus, a riot broke out
    when whites began to harass the federal marshals.
   In the end, two people were killed and several
    hundred were wounded.
Desegregating Southern Universities
   In 1963, the governor of Alabama, George C.
    Wallace, threatened a similar stand, trying to
    block the desegregation of the University of
    Alabama. The Kennedy administration
    responded with the full power of the federal
    government, including the U.S. Army.
   The confrontations with Barnett and Wallace
    pushed President Kennedy into a full
    commitment to end segregation.
   In June 1963, Kennedy proposed civil rights
    legislation.
The March on Washington

   National civil rights leaders decided to keep
    pressure on both the Kennedy
    administration and Congress to pass the
    civil rights legislation. The leaders planned a
    March on Washington to take place in
    August 1963.
   This idea was a revival of A. Phillip
    Randolph’s planned 1941 march, which
    had resulted in a commitment to fair
    employment during World War II.
The March on Washington

   Randolph was
    present at the
    march in 1963,
    along with the
    leaders of the
    NAACP, CORE,
    SCLC, the Urban
    League, and
    SNCC.             Roy Wilkins with a few of the 250,000 participants on the Mall
                      heading for the Lincoln Memorial in the NAACP march on
                      Washington on August 28, 1963]
                      Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division
                      Washington, D.C.; LC-USZ62-77160
The March on Washington
   Martin Luther King, Jr., delivered a moving address
    to an audience of more than 200,000 people.
   His “I Have a Dream” speech—delivered in front of
    the giant statue of Abraham Lincoln—became
    famous for the way in which it expressed the ideals
    of the civil rights movement.
   After President Kennedy was assassinated in
    November 1963, the new president, Lyndon
    Johnson, strongly urged the passage of the civil
    rights legislation as a tribute to Kennedy’s memory.
The March on Washington

   Over fierce opposition from Southern
    legislators, Johnson pushed the Civil Rights
    Act of 1964 through Congress.
   It prohibited segregation in public
    accommodations and discrimination in
    education and employment. It also gave the
    executive branch of government the power
    to enforce the act’s provisions.
Voter Registration
   Starting in 1961,
    SNCC and CORE
    organized voter
    registration
    campaigns in the
    predominantly
    African American    [NAACP photograph showing people waiting in

    counties of         line for voter registration, at Antioch Baptist
                        Church]
                        Library of Congress Prints and Photographs
    Mississippi,        Division Washington, D.C.; LC-USZ62-122260


    Alabama, and
    Georgia.
Voter Registration

   SNCC concentrated on voter registration
    because leaders believed that voting was a
    way to empower African Americans so that
    they could change racist policies in the
    South.
   SNCC members worked to teach African
    Americans necessary skills, such as
    reading, writing, and the correct answers to
    the voter registration application.
Voter Registration

   These activities caused violent reactions
    from Mississippi’s white supremacists.
   In June 1963, Medgar Evers, the NAACP
    Mississippi field secretary, was shot and
    killed in front of his home.
   In 1964, SNCC workers organized the
    Mississippi Summer Project to register
    African Americans to vote in the state,
    wanting to focus national attention on the
    state’s racism.
Voter Registration
   SNCC recruited Northern college students,
    teachers, artists, and clergy to work on the
    project. They believed the participation of
    these people would make the country
    concerned about discrimination and
    violence in Mississippi.
   The project did receive national attention,
    especially after three participants—two of
    whom were white—disappeared in June and
    were later found murdered and buried near
    Philadelphia, Mississippi.
Voter Registration
   By the end of the summer, the project had
    helped thousands of African Americans attempt
    to register, and about one thousand actually
    became registered voters.
   In early 1965, SCLC members employed a
    direct-action technique in a voting-rights
    protest initiated by SNCC in Selma, Alabama.
   When protests at the local courthouse were
    unsuccessful, protesters began to march to
    Montgomery, the state capital.
Voter Registration
   As marchers were leaving
    Selma, mounted police
    beat and tear-gassed
    them.
   Televised scenes of the
    violence, called Bloody
    Sunday, shocked many         A small band of Negro teenagers march singing and
                                 clapping their hands for a short distance, Selma,
                                 Alabama.
    Americans, and the           Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division
                                 Washington, D.C.; LC-USZ62-127739

    resulting outrage led to a
    commitment to continue
    the Selma March.
Voter Registration

   King and SCLC members led hundreds of
    people on a five-day, fifty-mile march to
    Montgomery.
   The Selma March drummed up broad
    national support for a law to protect
    Southern African Americans’ right to vote.
   President Johnson persuaded Congress to
    pass the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which
    suspended the use of literacy and other
    voter qualification tests in voter registration.
Voter Registration

   Over the next three years, almost one
    million more African Americans in the South
    registered to vote.
   By 1968, African American voters had
    having a significant impact on Southern
    politics.
   During the 1970s, African Americans were
    seeking and winning public offices in
    majority African American electoral districts.
The End of the Movement

   For many people the civil rights movement
    ended with the death of Martin Luther King,
    Jr. in 1968.
   Others believe it was over after the Selma
    March, because there have not been any
    significant changes since then.
   Still others argue the movement continues
    today because the goal of full equality has
    not yet been achieved.

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Events civil rights_move

  • 1. The Civil Rights Movement Harlem Renaissance Segregation School Desegregation The Montgomery Bus Boycott Sit-Ins Freedom Riders Desegregating Southern Universities The March on Washington Voter Registration The End of the Movement
  • 2. Harlem Renaissance  The Harlem Renaissance was an African American cultural movement of the 1920s and early 1930s centered around the Harlem neighborhood of New York City. [Grocery store, Harlem, 1940] Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C.; LC-USZC4-4737
  • 3. Harlem Renaissance  The Harlem Renaissance marked the first time that mainstream publishers and critics took African American literature seriously and African American arts attracted significant attention from the nation at large.  Instead of more direct political means, African American artists and writers used culture to work for the goals of civil rights and equality.  African American writers intended to express themselves freely, no matter what the public thought.
  • 4. Harlem Renaissance  Several factors laid the groundwork for the movement.  During a phenomenon known as the Great Migration, hundreds of thousands of African Americans moved from the economically depressed rural South to the industrial cities of the North, taking advantage of employment opportunities created by World War I.
  • 5. Harlem Renaissance  Increased education and employment opportunities following World War I led to the development of an African American middle class.  As more and more educated and socially conscious African Americans settled in New York’s neighborhood of Harlem, it developed into the political and cultural center of black America.
  • 6. Harlem Renaissance  African American literature and arts surged in the early 1900s.  Jazz and blues music moved with the African American populations from the South and Midwest into the bars and cabarets of Harlem.  This generation of African Americans artists, writers, and performers refused to let the reality of racism and discrimination in the United States keep them from pursuing their goals.
  • 7. Harlem Renaissance  In the autumn of 1926, a group of young African American writers produced Fire!, a literary magazine.  With Fire! a new generation of young writers and artists, including Langston Hughes, Wallace Thurman, and Zora Neale Hurston, took ownership of the literary Renaissance.
  • 8. Harlem Renaissance  No common literary style or political ideology defined the Harlem Renaissance. What united the participants was the sense of taking part in a common endeavor and their commitment to giving artistic expression to the African American experience.  Some common themes did exist, however. An interest in the roots of the twentieth- century African American experience in Africa and the American South was one such theme.
  • 9. Harlem Renaissance  There was a strong sense of racial pride and a desire for social and political equality among the participants.  The most characteristic aspect of the Harlem Renaissance was the diversity of its expression.  From the mid-1920s through the mid-1930s, about 16 African American writers published over 50 volumes of poetry and fiction, while dozens of other African American artists made their mark in painting, music, and theater.
  • 10. Harlem Renaissance  The diverse literary expression of the Harlem Renaissance was demonstrated through Langston Hughes’s weaving of the rhythms of African American music into his poems of ghetto life, as in The Weary Langston Hughes Blues (1926). Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, FSA/OWI Collection, [reproduction number, e.g., LC-USF34-9058-C]
  • 11. Harlem Renaissance  Diversity was also demonstrated through Zora Neale Hurston’s novels such as, Their Eyes Were Watching God (1937). Hurston used life of the rural South to create a study of race and [Portrait of Zora Neale Hurston] Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs gender in which a Division, Carl Van Vechten Collection, [reproduction number, e.g., LC-USZ62-54231] woman finds her true identity.
  • 12. Harlem Renaissance  Diversity and experimentation also flourished in the performing arts and were reflected in blues by such people as Bessie Smith and in jazz [Portrait of Bessie Smith holding feathers] by such people as Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, Carl Van Vechten Collection, [reproduction number, e.g., LC-USZ62- 54231] Duke Ellington.
  • 13. Harlem Renaissance  Jazz styles ranged from the combination of blues and ragtime by pianist Jelly Role Morton to the instrumentation of bandleader Louis Armstrong and the orchestration of New York, New York. Duke Ellington's trumpet section composer Duke Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, FSA/OWI Collection, [reproduction number, e.g., LC-USF34-9058-C] Ellington.
  • 14. Harlem Renaissance  The Harlem Renaissance pushed open the door for many African American authors to mainstream white periodicals and publishing houses.  Harlem’s cabarets attracted both Harlem residents and white New Yorkers seeking out Harlem nightlife.  Harlem’s famous Cotton Club carried this to an extreme, providing African American entertainment for exclusively white audiences.
  • 15. Harlem Renaissance  A number of factors contributed to the decline of the Harlem Renaissance in the mid-1930s.  During the Great Depression of the 1930s, organizations such as the NAACP and the National Urban League, which had actively promoted the Renaissance in the 1920s, shifted their focus to economic and social issues.
  • 16. Harlem Renaissance  Many influential African American writers and literary promoters, including Langston Hughes, James Weldon Johnson, and W.E.B. Du Bois, left New York City in the early 1930s.  The final blow to the Renaissance occurred when a riot broke out in Harlem in 1935. The riot was set off, in part, by the growing economic hardship brought on by the Depression and by mounting tension between the African American community and the white shop owners in Harlem.
  • 17. Harlem Renaissance  In spite of these problems, the Renaissance did not end overnight.  Almost one-third of the books published during the Renaissance appeared after 1929.  The Harlem Renaissance permanently altered the dynamics of African American art and literature in the United States.
  • 18. Harlem Renaissance  The existence of the large amount of literature from the Renaissance inspired writers such as Ralph Ellison and Richard Wright to pursue literary careers in New York, New York. Portrait of Richard Wright, the late 1930s and poet Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, 1940s. FSA/OWI Collection, [reproduction number, e.g., LC-USF34-9058-C]
  • 19. Harlem Renaissance  The writers that followed the Harlem Renaissance found that American publishers and the American public were more open to African American literature than they had been at the beginning of the twentieth century.  The outpouring of African American literature in the 1980s and 1990s by such writers as Alice Walker, Toni Morrison, and Spike Lee had its roots in the writing of the Harlem Renaissance.
  • 20. Segregation  The civil rights movement was a political, legal, and social struggle to gain full citizenship rights for African Americans.  The civil rights movement was first and foremost a challenge to segregation, the system of laws and customs separating African Americans and whites.  During the movement, individuals and civil rights organizations challenged segregation and discrimination with a variety of activities, including protest marches, boycotts, and refusal to abide by segregation laws.
  • 21. Segregation  Segregation was an attempt by many white Southerners to separate the races in every aspect of daily life.  Segregation was often called the Jim Crow system, after a minstrel show character from the 1830s who was an African American slave who embodied negative stereotypes of African Americans.
  • 22. Segregation  Segregation became common in Southern states following the end of Reconstruction in 1877. These states began to pass local and state laws that specified certain places “For Whites Only” and others Drinking fountain on county courthouse lawn, Halifax, North Carolina; for “Colored.” Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, FSA/OWI Collection, [reproduction number, e.g., LC-USF34-9058-C]
  • 23. Segregation  African Americans had separate schools, transportation, restaurants, and parks, many of which were poorly funded and inferior to those of whites.  Over the next 75 years, Jim Crow signs to Negro going in colored entrance of movie house on Saturday afternoon, Belzoni, Mississippi Delta, Mississippi separate the races went Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, FSA/OWI Collection, [reproduction number, e.g., LC- USF34-9058-C] up in every possible place.
  • 24. Segregation  The system of segregation also included the denial of voting rights, known as disenfranchisement.  Between 1890 and 1910, all Southern states passed laws imposing requirements for voting. These were used to prevent African Americans from voting, in spite of the Fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, which had been designed to protect African American voting rights.
  • 25. Segregation  The voting requirements included the ability to read and write, which disqualified many African Americans who had not had access to education; property ownership, which excluded most African Americans, and paying a poll tax, which prevented most Southern African Americans from voting because they could not afford it.
  • 26. Segregation  Conditions for African Americans in the Northern states were somewhat better, though up to 1910 only ten percent of African Americans lived in the North.  Segregated facilities were not as common in the North, but African Americans were usually denied entrance to the best hotels and restaurants.  African Americans were usually free to vote in the North.
  • 27. Segregation  Perhaps the most difficult part of Northern life was the economic discrimination against African Americans. They had to compete with large numbers of recent European immigrants for job opportunities, and they almost always lost because of their race.
  • 28. Segregation  In the late 1800s, African Americans sued to stop separate seating in railroad cars, states’ disfranchisement of voters, and denial of access to schools and restaurants.  One of the cases against segregated rail travel was Plessy v. Ferguson (1896), in which the Supreme Court of the United States ruled that “separate but equal” accommodations were constitutional.
  • 29. Segregation  In order to protest segregation, African Americans created national organizations.  The National Afro-American League was formed in 1890; W.E.B. Du Bois helped create the Niagara Movement in 1905 and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) in 1909.
  • 30. Segregation  In 1910, the National Urban League was created to help African Americans make the transition to urban, industrial life.  In 1942, the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) was founded to challenge segregation in public accommodations in the North.
  • 31. Segregation  The NAACP became one of the most important African American organizations of the twentieth century. It relied mainly on legal strategies that challenged segregation and 20th Annual session of the N.A.A.C.P., 6-26-29, Cleveland, Ohio Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C.; LC- discrimination in USZ62-111535 the courts.
  • 32. Segregation  Historian and sociologist W.E.B. Du Bois was a founder and leader of the NAACP. Starting in 1910, he made powerful arguments protesting segregation as editor of the NAACP [Portrait of Dr. W.E.B. Du Bois] magazine The Crisis. Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, Carl Van Vechten Collection, [reproduction number, e.g., LC-USZ62- 54231]
  • 33. School Desegregation  After World War II, the NAACP’s campaign for civil rights continued to proceed.  Led by Thurgood Marshall, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund challenged and overturned many forms of discrimination. Thurgood Marshall
  • 34. School Desegregation  The main focus of the NAACP turned to equal educational opportunities.  Marshall and the Defense Fund worked with Southern plaintiffs to challenge the Plessy decision, arguing that separate was inherently unequal.  The Supreme Court of the United States heard arguments on five cases that challenged elementary and secondary school segregation.
  • 35. School Desegregation  In May 1954, the Court issued its landmark ruling in Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, stating racially segregated education was unconstitutional and overturning the Plessy decision. Desegregate the schools! Vote Socialist Workers : Peter Camejo for president, Willie Mae Reid for vice- president.  White Southerners were Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C.; LC-USZ62-101452 shocked by the Brown decision.
  • 36. School Desegregation  By 1955, white opposition in the South had grown into massive resistance, using a strategy to persuade all whites to resist compliance with the desegregation orders.  Tactics included firing school employees who showed willingness to seek integration, closing public schools rather than desegregating, and boycotting all public education that was integrated.
  • 37. School Desegregation  Virtually no schools in the South segregated their schools in the first years following the Brown decision.  In Virginia, one county actually closed its public schools.  In 1957, Governor Orval Faubus defied a federal court order to admit nine African American students to Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas.  President Dwight Eisenhower sent federal troops to enforce desegregation.
  • 38. School Desegregation  The event was covered by the national media, and the fate of the nine students attempting to integrate the school gripped the nation.  Not all school desegregation was as dramatic as Little Rock schools gradually desegregated.  Often, schools were desegregated only in theory because racially segregated neighborhoods led to segregated schools.  To overcome the problem, some school districts began busing students to schools outside their neighborhoods in the 1970s.
  • 39. School Desegregation  As desegregation continued, the membership of the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) grew.  The KKK used violence or threats against anyone who was suspected of favoring desegregation or African American civil rights.  Ku Klux Klan terror, including intimidation and murder, was widespread in the South during the 1950s and 1960s, though Klan activities were not always reported in the media.
  • 40. The Montgomery Bus Boycott  Despite threats and violence, the civil rights movement quickly moved beyond school desegregation to challenge segregation in other areas.  In December 1955, Rosa Parks, a member of the Montgomery, Alabama, branch of the NAACP, was told to give up her seat on a city bus to a white person.
  • 41. The Montgomery Bus Boycott  When Parks refused to move, she was arrested.  The local NAACP, led by Edgar D. Nixon, recognized that the arrest of Woman fingerprinted. Mrs. Rosa Parks, Negro seamstress, Parks might rally whose refusal to move to the back of a bus touched off the bus boycott in Montgomery, Ala. local African Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C.; LC-USZ62-109643 Americans to protest segregated buses.
  • 42. The Montgomery Bus Boycott  Montgomery’s African American community had long been angry about their mistreatment on city buses where white drivers were rude and abusive.  The community had previously considered a boycott of the buses and overnight one was organized.  The bus boycott was an immediate success, with almost unanimous support from the African Americans in Montgomery.
  • 43. The Montgomery Bus Boycott  The boycott lasted for more than a year, expressing to the nation the determination of African Americans in the South to end segregation.  In November 1956, a federal court ordered Montgomery’s buses desegregated and the boycott ended in victory.
  • 44. The Montgomery Bus Boycott  A Baptist minister named Martin Luther King, Jr., was president of the Montgomery Improvement Association, the organization that directed the boycott.  His involvement in the protest made him a national figure. Through his eloquent appeals to Christian brotherhood and American idealism he attracted people both inside and outside the South.
  • 45. The Montgomery Bus Boycott  King became the president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) when it was founded in 1957.  The SCLC complemented the NAACP’s legal strategy by encouraging the use of nonviolent, direct action to protest segregation. These activities included marches, demonstrations, and boycotts.  The harsh white response to African Americans’ direct action eventually forced the federal government to confront the issue of racism in the South.
  • 46. Sit-Ins  On February 1, 1960, four African American college students from North Carolina A&T University began protesting racial segregation in restaurants by sitting at “White Only” lunch Sit-ins in a Nashville store counters and waiting Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C.; LC-USZ62-126236 to be served.
  • 47. Sit-Ins  This was not a new form of protest, but the response to the sit-ins spread throughout North Carolina, and within weeks sit-ins were taking place in cities across the South.  Many restaurants were desegregated in response to the sit-ins.  This form of protest demonstrated clearly to African Americans and whites alike that young African Americans were determined to reject segregation.
  • 48. Sit-Ins  In April 1960, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) was founded in Raleigh, North Carolina, to help organize and direct the student sit-in movement.  King encouraged SNCC’s creation, but the most important early advisor to the students was Ella Baker, who worked for both the NAACP and SCLC.
  • 49. Sit-Ins  Baker believed that SNCC civil rights activities should be based in individual African American communities.  SNCC adopted Baker’s approach and focused on [Ella Baker, head-and-shoulders portrait, facing slightly left] making changes in local Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C.; LC-USZ62-110575 communities, rather than striving for national change.
  • 50. Freedom Riders  After the sit-in movement, some SNCC members participated in the 1961 Freedom Rides organized by CORE.  The Freedom Riders, both African American and white, traveled around the South in buses to test the effectiveness of a 1960 U.S. Supreme Court decision declaring segregation illegal in bus stations open to interstate travel.
  • 51. Freedom Riders  The Freedom Rides began in Washington, D.C. Except for some violence in Rock Hill, South Carolina, the trip was peaceful until the buses reached Alabama, where violence erupted.  In Anniston, Alabama, one bus was burned and some riders were beaten.  In Birmingham, a mob attacked the riders when they got off the bus.  The riders suffered even more severe beatings in Montgomery.
  • 52. Freedom Riders  The violence brought national attention to the Freedom Riders and fierce condemnation of Alabama officials for allowing the brutality to occur.  The administration of President John F. Kennedy stepped in to protect the Freedom Riders when it was clear that Alabama officials would not guarantee their safe travel.
  • 53. Freedom Riders  The riders continued on to Jackson, Mississippi, where they were arrested and imprisoned at the state penitentiary, ending the protest.  The Freedom Rides did result in the desegregation of some bus stations, but more importantly they caught the attention of the American public.
  • 54. Desegregating Southern Universities  In 1962, James Meredith—an African American—applied for admission to the University of Mississippi.  The university attempted to block Meredith’s admission, and he filed suit.  After working through the state courts, Meredith was successful when a federal court ordered the university to desegregate and accept Meredith as a student.
  • 55. Desegregating Southern Universities  The Governor of Mississippi, Ross Barnett, defied the court order and tried to prevent Meredith from enrolling.  In response, the administration of President Kennedy intervened to uphold the court order. Kennedy sent federal troops to protect Meredith when he went to enroll.  During his first night on campus, a riot broke out when whites began to harass the federal marshals.  In the end, two people were killed and several hundred were wounded.
  • 56. Desegregating Southern Universities  In 1963, the governor of Alabama, George C. Wallace, threatened a similar stand, trying to block the desegregation of the University of Alabama. The Kennedy administration responded with the full power of the federal government, including the U.S. Army.  The confrontations with Barnett and Wallace pushed President Kennedy into a full commitment to end segregation.  In June 1963, Kennedy proposed civil rights legislation.
  • 57. The March on Washington  National civil rights leaders decided to keep pressure on both the Kennedy administration and Congress to pass the civil rights legislation. The leaders planned a March on Washington to take place in August 1963.  This idea was a revival of A. Phillip Randolph’s planned 1941 march, which had resulted in a commitment to fair employment during World War II.
  • 58. The March on Washington  Randolph was present at the march in 1963, along with the leaders of the NAACP, CORE, SCLC, the Urban League, and SNCC. Roy Wilkins with a few of the 250,000 participants on the Mall heading for the Lincoln Memorial in the NAACP march on Washington on August 28, 1963] Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C.; LC-USZ62-77160
  • 59. The March on Washington  Martin Luther King, Jr., delivered a moving address to an audience of more than 200,000 people.  His “I Have a Dream” speech—delivered in front of the giant statue of Abraham Lincoln—became famous for the way in which it expressed the ideals of the civil rights movement.  After President Kennedy was assassinated in November 1963, the new president, Lyndon Johnson, strongly urged the passage of the civil rights legislation as a tribute to Kennedy’s memory.
  • 60. The March on Washington  Over fierce opposition from Southern legislators, Johnson pushed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 through Congress.  It prohibited segregation in public accommodations and discrimination in education and employment. It also gave the executive branch of government the power to enforce the act’s provisions.
  • 61. Voter Registration  Starting in 1961, SNCC and CORE organized voter registration campaigns in the predominantly African American [NAACP photograph showing people waiting in counties of line for voter registration, at Antioch Baptist Church] Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Mississippi, Division Washington, D.C.; LC-USZ62-122260 Alabama, and Georgia.
  • 62. Voter Registration  SNCC concentrated on voter registration because leaders believed that voting was a way to empower African Americans so that they could change racist policies in the South.  SNCC members worked to teach African Americans necessary skills, such as reading, writing, and the correct answers to the voter registration application.
  • 63. Voter Registration  These activities caused violent reactions from Mississippi’s white supremacists.  In June 1963, Medgar Evers, the NAACP Mississippi field secretary, was shot and killed in front of his home.  In 1964, SNCC workers organized the Mississippi Summer Project to register African Americans to vote in the state, wanting to focus national attention on the state’s racism.
  • 64. Voter Registration  SNCC recruited Northern college students, teachers, artists, and clergy to work on the project. They believed the participation of these people would make the country concerned about discrimination and violence in Mississippi.  The project did receive national attention, especially after three participants—two of whom were white—disappeared in June and were later found murdered and buried near Philadelphia, Mississippi.
  • 65. Voter Registration  By the end of the summer, the project had helped thousands of African Americans attempt to register, and about one thousand actually became registered voters.  In early 1965, SCLC members employed a direct-action technique in a voting-rights protest initiated by SNCC in Selma, Alabama.  When protests at the local courthouse were unsuccessful, protesters began to march to Montgomery, the state capital.
  • 66. Voter Registration  As marchers were leaving Selma, mounted police beat and tear-gassed them.  Televised scenes of the violence, called Bloody Sunday, shocked many A small band of Negro teenagers march singing and clapping their hands for a short distance, Selma, Alabama. Americans, and the Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C.; LC-USZ62-127739 resulting outrage led to a commitment to continue the Selma March.
  • 67. Voter Registration  King and SCLC members led hundreds of people on a five-day, fifty-mile march to Montgomery.  The Selma March drummed up broad national support for a law to protect Southern African Americans’ right to vote.  President Johnson persuaded Congress to pass the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which suspended the use of literacy and other voter qualification tests in voter registration.
  • 68. Voter Registration  Over the next three years, almost one million more African Americans in the South registered to vote.  By 1968, African American voters had having a significant impact on Southern politics.  During the 1970s, African Americans were seeking and winning public offices in majority African American electoral districts.
  • 69. The End of the Movement  For many people the civil rights movement ended with the death of Martin Luther King, Jr. in 1968.  Others believe it was over after the Selma March, because there have not been any significant changes since then.  Still others argue the movement continues today because the goal of full equality has not yet been achieved.