Name: Answer Key Date______Class period_____

Civil Rights Timeline

*While the peak of the Civil Rights movement began with the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education, Topeka, KN decision and went through the 1965 Voting Rights Act, the Civil Rights movement encompasses the entire struggle of the African American race to gain equality and arguably is still going on today.

Use your textbook, internet, or other resources to complete the following Civil Rights timeline. These will be events directly related to African American history.

Date * Who/What More Details

Jan. 1, 1863 Emancipation Proclamation freed all slaves in Confederate controlled areas

Jan. 31, 1865 (proposed) 13th amendment Made slavery illegal throughout the US

Dec. 18, 1865 (ratified)

1865 Freedman’s Bureau provide relief for all poor people—black

& white in the South

1866 (proposed) 14th amendment 1. All people born or naturalized in the US are

July 28, 1868 (ratified) Citizens.

2.  Citizens guaranteed equal protection under the law

3.  States could not “deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.”

4.  Banned former Confederate officials from holding state or federal offices.

5.  State laws are subject to review by federal courts.

6.  Congress has power to pass any laws needed to enforce any part of amendment.

Proposed Feb. 1869/ 15th amendment gave African American men in US the

Ratified March 1870 right to vote

1875 Civil Rights Act of 1875 guaranteed African Americans equal rights in

(later declared unconstitutional) public places like theaters & public

transportation

1881 Tuskegee Institute founded by Booker T. Washington

to develop African American businesses

[economic power =social change]

late 1890s Ida B. Wells (-Barnett) A Red Record—3 yr. listing of lynchings of

blacks—named lynchers

1896 Plessy v. Ferguson Declared that segregation was allowed if

(Supreme Court) “separate but equal” facilities were provided for

African Americans.

1909 National Association for the Civil Rights organization formed by W.E.B. DuBois Advancement of Colored People and others to fight discrimination and segregation

1914 UNIA—Universal Negro Founded by Marcus Garvey to promote

Improvement Association racial pride and unity & urged blacks to

become economically independent

1920s Harlem Renaissance An important period of African American

(after The Great Migration) artistic growth

Countee Cullen--poet

Zora Neal Hurston--author

Paul Robeson—singer/actor

December 1946 Committee on Civil Rights created by President Truman

Findings & recommendations: racial

discrimination throughout nation; should have

new laws to protect all voters, desegregation

of armed forces, permanent Fair Employment

Practices Commission

Truman’s 1948 actions: ended segregation in

Military; banned racial discrimination in

Hiring of federal employees

1950 Sweatt v. Painter (state) law schools must admit black

applicants who qualify even if a black

law school exists

May 17, 1954 Brown v. Board of Education major landmark Supreme Court case in which

Topeaka, KN racial segregation was unconstitutional

December 1, 1955 Rosa Parks and Parks refused to give up her seat to a

Montgomery Bus Boycott white passenger and was arrested.

Black leaders organized a boycott of the

Montgomery Bus System

1957 “The Little Rock Nine” at 9 black students selected to integrate

Central High School Central HS; Gov. Orval Faubus used

Little Rock, Arkansas National Guard to prevent students from

starting school; Pres. Eisenhower sent in

federal troops to force desegregation;

Ernest Green=1st Af. Am. to graduate from

Central HS; Little Rock schools closed the

next year rather than integrate

1957 SCLC—Southern Christian Founded by Martin Luther King, Jr. and 60 other

Leadership Conference ministers to coordinate non-violent protests

Feb. 1, 1960 Sit-Ins 4 black NC A&T students sit down at an all

(Greensboro, NC) whites lunch counter and were refused service;

returned the next day with even more African

American students; this triggers many other

similar non-violent protests in the South

April 1960 SNCC—Student Nonviolent formed in Raleigh, NC to organize peaceful Civil

Coordinating Committee Rights demonstrations; Stokely Carmichael leads

this group into a more radical organization

May 4, 1961 CORE—Congress of Racial began a series of Freedom Rides to protest

Equality segregation on buses and in southern bus

stations

1962 James Meredith won federal court case that allowed him to

(enroll) attend the all white University of

Mississippi (Ole Miss); caused riots; he

did graduate

April 1963 Martin Luther King Jr.’s King is jailed in Birmingham, Alabama for

Letter from Birmingham Jail participation in a series of protest marches

*May 1963 protests continued and Police Commissioner

Eugene “Bull” Connor used attack dogs and

fire hoses on protestors including children

seen on national TV, this outraged many and

raised awareness of the struggle for Civil Rights

June 12, 1963 Medgar Evers NAACP field secretary murdered outside of his

home in Jackson, Mississippi; Byron De La

Beckwith is tried twice for murder, both trials

Ending in hung juries—he is finally convicted in

1994

August 28, 1963 March on Washington 250,000 people on the Mall in front of Lincoln

Memorial for Civil Rights; MLK gave his now

Famous “I Have a Dream” speech

Sept. 15, 1963 4 little girls killed at Sixteenth bomb explodes at African American, known as a

Street Baptist Church popular Civil Rights meeting place, killing the

Birmingham, Alabama girls while they were attending Sunday school

July 2, 1964 Civil Rights Act of 1964 banned segregation in public places such as

Restaurants and transportation facilities; also

Prohibited discrimination by employers,

unions,or universities with federal

contracts/money

Summer 1964 Freedom Summer white college students traveled to Mississippi to

help African Americans register to vote

Aug. 5, 1964 Missing Civil Rights workers names: James Chaney(Af. Am.); 2 whites--

Found murdered Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner

Situation: the 3 went to Mississippi to register

African Americans to vote

Feb. 21, 1965 Assassination of Malcolm X He had been a leader of the Nation of Islam,

which favored black separatism—social and

economic independence; in the beginning did not

discourage violence—“by any means necessary”

left Nation of Islam and was reconsidering his

ideas of integration when he was shot by three

members of the Nation of Islam in New York City

March 7, 1965 March from Selma to voter registration march organized by MLK

Montgomery, Alabama

Aug. 10, 1965 Voting Rights Act of 1965 gave federal government the power to inspect

voter registration procedures and protect all

citizens’ voting rights (final ban on literacy

tests, poll taxes, grandfather clauses, etc.)

Watts Riots riots in a neighborhood of Los Angeles

caused by anger over racism; lead to riots

in other parts of the country

April 4, 1968 Assassination of Dr. Martin James Earl Ray was convicted for shooting

Luther King, Jr. in Memphis Dr. King on the balcony of a Memphis hotel.

Tennessee His death caused riots in more than 100 US cities

April 11, 1968 Civil Rights Act of 1968 Prohibits discrimination in the sale, rental, and

financing of housing

April 20, 1971 Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg upholds busing as a legitimate means of

Board of Education achieving integration of public schools

also approves magnet schools, compensatory

education and other appropriate tools

March 22, 1988 Civil Rights Restoration Act expands the reach of non-discrimination laws

within private institutions receiving federal funds

(Congress overrides Pres. Reagan’s veto)

Nov. 22, 1991 Civil Rights Act of 1991 strengthens existing civil rights laws and

provides for damages in cases of intentional

employment discrimination

2001 Charlotte NC parents successfully seek an end to the desegregation

process and a bar to the use of race in making

student assignments

Define the following terms:

Prejudice: irrational suspicion or hatred of a particular group, race, or religion THOUGHT

(holding unreasonable preconceived judgments or convicts)

Discrimination: treatment or consideration based on class or category rather than individual merit

To act on prejudice ACTION

Segregation: separate by race

de facto: segregation that exists by practice and custom ex) white flight after WWII

de jure: segregation by law ex) Jim Crow laws

Integration: to open to people of all races or ethnic groups without restriction; desegregate