Transcript the_split

The Split
From Peaceful Protest to
Black Power
Overview of Early Civil Rights Movement
Focus on ending “Jim Crow” in the South –
Desegregation, Voting Rights, Civil Rights for Southern Blacks
• Court challenges to Plessy v.
Ferguson (1896) by NAACP
throughout first half of 20th
century
• Formation of:
– CORE
– SCLC
– SNCC
• Montgomery Bus Boycott
• Sit-Ins
• Freedom Riders
• Integration of public schools &
universities
• Protest Marches (DC, Selma)
• Voter Registration Drives
•
Brown v. Topeka Board of Education
(1954)
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Organization of the Civil Rights
Movement
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Martin Luther King, Jr. leader of
movement
Philosophy of civil disobedience and
“militant non-violence”
Southern white reaction: mass arrests,
police brutality, white mob violence,
bombings, murders & assassinations
National TV coverage 
Federal Intervention
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Supreme courts rules against “separate
but equal”
Desegregation of Schools
Marshals, US soldiers sent into South
Civil Rights Act 1964
Voting Rights Act 1965
Martin Luther King wins 1964 Nobel
Peace Prize
Why a Split?
• Civil Rights movement had been successful at ending Jim
Crow in the mostly rural South
• 70% of black population lived in metropolitan areas (cities)
– 1916 to 1970: over 6 million black people moved north
– 1940 to 1960: Chicago's black population grew from 278,000 to
813,000
– Central-city ghettos were bypassed by post-war prosperity
• Widespread employment discrimination, crime, lack of police
• Forced to live in overcrowded slums or into public-housing high rises
• Urban blacks grew very disillusioned with life in the north
• Non-violent tactics that succeeded in the rural South did
not readily worked in northern cities
• Some questioned the nonviolent approach—was it really
working?
– Still much injustice and violence
– Some African Americans believed that nonviolence and integration
within white society wouldn’t work, prejudice was too deep
James Baldwin
• Author of over two dozen novels and essays
• The Fire Next Time (1963)
– Wrote that suffering and oppression set African
Americans apart, but also made them stronger
– African Americans were angry and tired of
promises
Black Nationalism
• Black Nationalism – a belief in
the separate identify and racial
unity of the African American
community
• Nation of Islam
– founded by Elijah Muhammad.
– Believed the enemy of the Nation
of Islam was white society
– Believed in taking no political
action
Malcolm X
• Born Malcolm Little
– Excellent jr. high school student, but with
limited opportunities he turned to crime
• Sentenced to 7 years in jail in Boston
for burglary
– took advantage of prison education system
• In prison he joined Nation of Islam (aka
the Black Muslims)
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Changed name to Malcolm X
X replaced the slave-name he inherited
Believed white society was oppressive
Preached black separation from white
society and self-help
– Very charismatic, forceful speaker
Malcolm X & Non-Integration
• Malcolm X disagreed w/ the tactics and
goals of the early civil rights movement
– Called for the complete separation of African
Americans from white people
– Proposed creating a separate country for black
people until African Americans could return to Africa
– Rejected the strategy of nonviolence
– Taught that black people should use any necessary
means of self-defense to protect themselves
• Civil rights organizations denounced
Malcolm X an irresponsible extremist
– Malcolm X was equally critical of the civil rights
movement
– He described its leaders as "stooges" for the
white establishment and said that Martin Luther
King, Jr. was a "chump"
– Called March on Washington “Farce of
Washington”
Non-integration (continued)
• Malcolm X's speeches had a
powerful effect on his audiences,
generally African Americans who
lived in the Northern and Western
cities tired of being told to wait for
freedom, justice, equality, and
respect
– Many blacks felt that he expressed their
complaints better than the civil rights
movement did.
• Eventually Malcolm X came to disagree with
Elijah Muhammad on many things,
especially lack of political action
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Left the Nation of Islam to form his own religious
organization, Muslim Mosque, Inc.
Malcolm X’s Assassination
• After a pilgrimage to Mecca
(hajj) and talking with African
Muslims, Malcolm X changed
his view on the civil rights
movement
– He was ready to work with other
civil rights leaders and white
Americans on some issues
• February 21, 1965 shot to
death at a rally in Manhattan
NY
– 3 members of Nation of Islam
charged with his murder
Black Power
• Stokely Carmichael
– Member of SNCC
– Heard Malcolm X’s
message
– Rose to SNCC
leadership and the group
became more militant
– After being jailed & beaten for participating in
demonstrations, he was tired of nonviolence
• Encouraged SNCC members to carry guns for self-defense
• Wanted to make the group exclusively black, rejecting all
white activists.
The Split with SNCC
The March Against Fear, June, 1966
- Greenwood, Mississippi, Carmichael was arrested; took
the speaker's platform and delivered his famous "Black
Power" speech
- Called on African Americans to unite, recognize their heritage and
build a sense of community
- Blacks should define their own goals, lead their own organizations,
and support those organizations.
- SNCC's "Black Power" slogan was now competing with SCLC's
"Freedom Now" slogan.
- MLK had left for Chicago to organize the open housing marches,
returned to to find that the civil rights movements' internal divisions
between the old guard and new guard had gone public.
- King’s followers were singing “We Shall Overcome”
- Carmichael’s followers over-sang them with “We Shall Overrun”
Black Panthers
• Formed by Bobby Seale and
Huey Newton
– Wanted African Americans to
lead their own communities
– Demanded that the federal
government rebuild the nation’s
ghettos to make up for years of
neglect
– Newton followed words of Mao
Zedong, “Power flows from the
barrel of a gun”
• Gave rise to the “Black is
Beautiful” slogan
The Split
Early Civil Rights
Movement
Later Civil Rights
Movement
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• NAACP
• SCLC
• CORE
• SNCC
• Nation of Islam
• Black Panthers
– Moderate organizations
– Sought desegregation and
equal rights
– Belief in nonviolent
protest; court cases,
marches, sit-ins
– Civil disobedience
– Emphasis on “Black
Nationalism”
– Did not agree with
integration with white
society, separatist
– Self-sufficiency for black
community
– Confrontational with police
Segregation
Boston MA
• De jure segregation
(“Segregation of the day”)
– Racial separation created
by law
– Early civil rights movement
focused battles on this
• De facto segregation
(“Segregation by fact”)
– Separation caused by
poverty, mortgage
discrimination; “racial
steering” restricted blacks
to certain neighborhoods
– “Redlining” – no services,
supermarkets, banks, jobs
– Later civil rights movement
concentrated on this
Magenta = +50% Black
Los Angeles CA
Race Riots
• 1964-1968, dozens of race
riots broke out in black
urban neighborhoods,
mostly in northern &
western cities
– African Americans were
frustrated, kept out of well-paying
jobs, job training programs, and
suburban housing
– Inner-city schools were run-down
& inadequate
– Police officers were viewed as
dangerous oppressors rather than
upholders of justice
– Many riots began after an arrest
or incident of police brutality /
shooting of an African American
– “Violent urban renewal”
MLK after the split
• 1966 – had begun to focus on housing
discrimination in Chicago when split occurred
• 1967 - Opposed Vietnam War
– Saw a "cruel irony" of American blacks fighting, dying
for a country which treated them as second class
citizens
• Poor People's Campaign, 1968
– King / SCLC called on government to invest in
rebuilding America's cities
– Felt Congress had "hostility to the poor" by spending
$ on the war rather than on urban blight
Assassination
• March 29, 1968 - King went to
Memphis, TN to support black
sanitation workers on strike for
higher wages and better
treatment
• April 4 - King shot and killed as
he stood on his motel's second
floor balcony
• King’s assassination led to a
nationwide wave of riots in
Washington DC, Chicago,
Baltimore, Louisville, Kansas
City, and dozens of other cities
Legacy of Civil Rights Movement
– Civil Rights Act 1964 – ended much discrimination
for blacks and women
– Voting Rights Act 1965 – African Americans vote &
hold office without restrictions
• Number of African American elected officials rose by 88%
– Civil Rights Act 1968 – Segregation made illegal
• aka Fair Housing Act
– Martin Luther King, Jr. Day
– Gave rise to many other protest movements in the
late 1960s - early 1970s