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The Journey to the Civil Rights Movement

The Journey to the Civil Rights Movement

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The Journey to the Civil Rights Movement . Home What were Jim Crow Laws? Legislation Violence The Great Migration Jim Crow Laws Martin Luther King, Jr. What Rights Are Worth Fighting For? . What were Jim Crow Laws?. Crucial Legislation. Fourteenth Amendment (1868) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Journey to the  Civil Rights Movement

The Journey to the Civil Rights Movement

Page 2: The Journey to the  Civil Rights Movement

Home

What were Jim Crow Laws?

Legislation

Violence

The Great Migration

Jim Crow Laws

Martin Luther King, Jr.

Page 3: The Journey to the  Civil Rights Movement

What Rights Are Worth Fighting For?

Page 4: The Journey to the  Civil Rights Movement

What were Jim Crow Laws?

Page 5: The Journey to the  Civil Rights Movement

Fourteenth Amendment (1868)Designed to grant citizenship to individuals once enslaved

Separate Car Act(1890)Separate but equal train car accommodations

Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) Upheld prior segregation laws :Separate but equal

Crucial Legislation

Page 6: The Journey to the  Civil Rights Movement

Ku Klux Klan

Page 7: The Journey to the  Civil Rights Movement

Whites27%

Blacks73%

Lynchings

U.S

Colorado

White: 65Black: 3

Page 8: The Journey to the  Civil Rights Movement

Wilmington Riot (1868)

Page 9: The Journey to the  Civil Rights Movement

"The North symbolized to me all that I had not felt or seen; it had no relation to what actually existed. Yet by imagining a place where everything is possible, it kept hope alive inside of me."

Richard Wright

THE GREAT MIGRATION

Page 10: The Journey to the  Civil Rights Movement

Daily Life According to Jim Crow Laws…

Page 11: The Journey to the  Civil Rights Movement
Page 12: The Journey to the  Civil Rights Movement

Miscegenation: Prohibited interracial

marriages

1901: The Alabama Constitution is amended to block the passage of any law authorizing or legalizing interracial marriage. The measure will remain unchanged until November 2000.

1955:The Maryland legislature amends an anti-miscegenation statute first passed in 1884. Under the new law, any white woman who births a child conceived with a black or mixed-race man will be imprisoned for up to five years. The law will be renewed in 1957.

Page 13: The Journey to the  Civil Rights Movement
Page 14: The Journey to the  Civil Rights Movement

Public Entertainment

Page 15: The Journey to the  Civil Rights Movement

SchoolSegregation

Page 16: The Journey to the  Civil Rights Movement

TRANSPORTATION

Page 17: The Journey to the  Civil Rights Movement

White’s Only: No Coloreds Allowed

Page 18: The Journey to the  Civil Rights Movement

Voting

Page 19: The Journey to the  Civil Rights Movement

A Black male could not shake hands with a White male

Blacks and Whites were not supposed to eat together.

Blacks were not allowed to show public affection toward one another in public, especially kissing, because it offended Whites.

Whites did not use names of respect when referring to Blacks, for example, Mr., Mrs., Ms., Sir or Ma'am.

If a Black person rode in a car with a White person, the Black person sat in the back seat or the back of a truck.

Jim Crow’s Proper Etiquette

Page 20: The Journey to the  Civil Rights Movement

“There comes a time when people get tired of being trampled over by the tired feet of oppression …”

Martin Luther King, Jr