EVENTS OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT
I. Introduction
A. Why it began
B. What happened
II. Emmett Till
A. Said
"Bye-Baby" to white woman
B. White woman brother and husband kill Emmett
C. Both men found not guilty of their crimes
III. Little Rock Nine
A. Gov. Faubus denies entry
B. Pres. Eisenhower ordered troops to
integrate Central High School
C. Ernest Green first black graduate of
Central High
IV. James Meredith
A. Denied by the University of
Mississippi after being accepted
B. Pres. Kennedy ordered troops to escort
Meredith to campus
C. Meredith graduates two years later
V. COFO
Members
A. Arrested on false charges of speeding
B. Murdered by the KKK
C. Pres. Johnson had FBI investigate
D. A few men were charged with
charges of violating civil rights
VI. Conclusion
A. Not able to
share all
B. Hope you liked it
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Events of the Civil Rights Movement
The United States Civil Rights
Movement of the 1960's was the centerfold of the
1900's. The Movement came
about because not all Americans were being treated fairly. In
general white
Americans were treated better than any other American people, especially black
people. There were many events of the Civil Rights Movement some dealt with
black people
not getting a fair education. Some events came about because
people were advocating that
people should be able to practice their American
rights. The term paper that you are about to
read is composed of events that
occurred as apart of the Civil Rights Movements. The events
are all in
chronological order with the brutal murder of Emmett Till first in order. After
that is the
story of Arkansas' Central High School's integration. Keeping
with the idea of equal education,
you will be able read how the University
of Mississippi was integrated by James Meredith with
the assistance of the
U.S. Government. Lastly you will see the power the Ku Klux Klan had in
the
deep South, especially Mississippi, with the murder of three members of the
Council of
Federated Organizations (COFO). These events are just a glimpse
of what the Civil Rights
Movement truly was. Now here is the strory of young
Emmett Till.
Emmett Till
Not knowing the customs of Mississippi was the
downfall for young Emmett Till. While
visiting family near Money,
Mississippi, Emmett Till, age 14, was murdered. Emmett grew up on
Chicago's
South side, where he was a fun loving child with a bit of a smart mouth. Living
in
Chicago, Emmett knew of segregation but had white play mates. On one
occasion he had
showed his cousins a picture of a white girl and had told
them that she was his girl. His friends
were some what impressed and had
dared Emmett to speak to a white woman who was inside
of the store, that
they were standing in front of. Emmett went in and bought some candy and as
he left, he said to the woman, "Bye-baby." That would be the biggest mistake
of his life. When
the woman's husband got back from out of town, there was
trouble for Emmett. The woman's
husband, Roy Bryant, and her brother, J.W.
Milam, paid a visit to the cabin of Mose Wright,
Emmett's grandfather. The
white men did not listen to Mose Wrights suggestion that since
Emmett was
not from Mississippi, that they may just whip him. Instead, the men kidnapped
Emmett and took him to the Tallahatchie River. When they got to the River,
they made him
carry a 75 pound cotton gin fan to the river bank. The men
ordered Emmett to strip, then they
beat him and gouged his eye out. After
that, they shot him in the head and then threw his body
into the river. When
his body was discovered, he was so badly mangled that his grandfather
was
only able to recognize Emmett by the ring that he wore, which bore his father's
initials. The
authorities of Mississippi wanted Emmett's body buried quickly
in Mississippi, so that the news
would just stay in Mississippi. Emmett's
mother (Mamie Bradley) did not want her son's body
buried in the land that
let his killers go free. Emmett's body was shipped to Chicago, where his
funeral was held. Emmett's funeral was attended by thousands, at which his
mother left the
casket open. A picture of Emmett's distended corpse was
published in Jet magazine. Mamie
Bradley decided to have the funeral delayed
because she wanted the world to see what "those
animals that call themselves
men" had done to her son. In less than two weeks after the body of
Emmett
was buried his murderers were put on trial in a segregated court room. The two
were
acquitted of murder, because the jury claimed the state failed to
identify the body. Blacks in
other states saw Mississippi as the ultimate
symbol of white supremacy for the ignoring the
murder of black children. The
public's reaction was further fueled when Milam and Bryant were
not indicted
on charges of kidnapping. Till's murder is seen as an engine for the Civil
Rights
Movement, since it affected adolescents that were apart of the
movement. Mamie Bradley
lectured around the country calling herself a
"nobody" and her son " a little nobody that shook up
the world". She used to
believe that the business of blacks in the South was their own business,
but
then saw that it was everyone's business. The murder of Emmett Till gave the
first spark to
the civil rights movement. A few months later Mrs. Rosa Parks
did not give up her seat.
Little Rock Nine
On September 25, 1957,
Arkansas Governor Orval Faubus was pushed to the side by
President Dwight
Eisenhower. Eisenhower, ordered federal troops to integrate Central High
School. Nine black students desegrated Central High School, after weeks of
being turned away
by Governor Faubus and a mob of white people. The mob of
nearly a thousand had threatened
to enter the school and lynch the black
students a few days before the president had ordered
troops to let the
students enter the school. September 3rd was the first day of school. Daisy
Bates, the president of Arkansas' NAACP, escorted eight of the nine students
to school.
Elizabeth Eckford the student that Mrs. Bates was not able to
pick up, was met by a mob and
national guardsmen who would not let her into
the school. The guardsmen left her to the mob
who threatened her and spat on
her. Elizabeth was able to get away from the crowd when a
nice white woman
helped her get onto a bus. The other eight students who rode to school with
Mrs. Bates, also were turned away by the national guards. The students
continued to try to
enter the school, but each time they were turned away.
On September 23rd, the nine were able
to sneak into the school and later
left when being threatened with being lynched. Melba Pattillo,
one of the
students, remembers the day. She remembers that they were put into a car in the
basement of the school, and a police officer escorted them out. As they left
they were told to
put their heads down so that the mob of people would not
be able to see them. The students
could see hands going over the windows of
the car as the car went through the crowd. After
that incident Mrs. Bates
said the students would not be back until there is assurance from the
president that the students will not be abused. Two days later the students
were escorted by
more than a thousand paratroopers form the U.S. Army's
Airborne Division. That was the first
time in eighty-one years that a
president had placed American troops in the South to defend the
constitutional rights of blacks. The first year of integration at Central
High School ended on May
27, 1958, with the graduation of Ernest Green, the
first black graduate of Central High School.
James Meredeth
Segregation at the University of Mississippi "Ole Miss" ended on September
30, 1962
when James Meredith was escorted onto the campus of the University
of Mississippi. The
University of Mississippi was a quality university that
was one of the best in the South but only
for whites. The university was not
integrated with the slightest of ease at all. James Meredith
before he had
applied for admissions into the university severed on the U.S. Airforce for nine
years. Also James attended Jackson State University from which he wanted to
transfer. James
was accepted into Ole Miss when he applied because he did
not fill in the race section of the
application thinking that it was
irrelevant. When the University found out that he was black his
application
was nullified, James sued the University and won in the 5th U.S. Circuit Court,
with
the help of Thurgood Marshall. On September 3, 1962 President John F.
Kennedy ordered
that the University of Mississippi be integrated. On
September 30, 1962, arrived 123 deputy
marshals, 316 border patrolmen, and
97 federal prison guards who stood in front of the
University. There was a
mob of white people in front of the administration building expecting
Meredith to enroll there. Instead Meredith was secretly taken to his dorm
room. The president
had reserved backup enforcement but they were not able
to make it to the University to stop the
riot that broke out upon James
arrival. Meredith was protected by twenty-four federal agents
for about two
weeks to ensure his safety. Two years later in 1963 James Meredith gratitude
from the University of Mississippi.
COFO Members
Many activist
of the Civil Rights Movement were harassed, beaten, and even killed.
This
was no different for three members of the Council of Federated Organizations
(COFO).
James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwerner were members of
COFO who
decided to go to Mississippi for the Mississippi Freedom Summer
Project. The members of the
summer Project were not appreciated by the White
Knights of the Ku Klux Klan. The White
Knights lived in the area in which
COFO concentrated most of their operations. Michael
Schwerner really was not
liked by the White Knights. Since, Schwerner was a Jew from New
York he was
seen as a target for the White Knights. The White Knights referred to him as a
"Nigger loving agitator." Knowing the dangers of their trips, on June 20,
1964, Chaney,
Goodman, and Schwerner set out for Philadelphia, Mississippi.
The three went there to check
out the remains of the Mt. Zion Baptist
Church, which had been bombed by the White Knights.
After leaving the church
the three were arrested upon fabricated charges of speeding by Deputy
Sheriff Cecil Price. While they were in jail a Klan pick team was formed.
The three were
released and were never seen alive again. Hours after the
three were missing, COFO confirmed
the three as missing, but state
authorities stated as a hoax. When news of the three reached the
White
House, President Johnson stated their disappearances as kidnappings. Soon after
President Johnson sent J. Edgar Hoover to Philadelphia, Mississippi to
search for the missing
members of COFO. In just one day they found the
members car which had been badly burned.
When Hoover saw the car he called
the president and confirmed the three as dead. As a part of
the FBI
investigation, FBI agents acted as members of the White Knights and were able to
locate where the COFO members were buried. Twenty-one men, including Deputy
Price were
arrested. the FBI was able to put what happened the night the
three disappeared together. The
three left the jail and were forced over, on
the highway, by Deputy Price along with two other
White Knight members.
Price approached the car of the COFO members and ordered them
into his
patrol car. Then they were taken to a secluded part of the woods. One of the
Klan
members dragged Michael Schwerner from the car and asked him, "Are you
that Nigger
lover?", then shot him. Andrew Goodman was dragged from the car
and was shot. One of the
men yelled "Hey save one for me!" Chaney was
dragged from the car and was shot. The
gunman said "You didn't leave me
anything but a Nigger but at least I killed me a Nigger." The
state of
Mississippi refused to bring up indictments but the federal government did. Most
of the
men were found not guilty but some of them were convicted of
depriving the three men of the
Civil Rights.
There were many events
that occurred during the Civil Rights Movement that I was not
able to make
apart of my paper. Like the story of the "Four Little Girls" who were killed in
an
Alabama church bombing. Also, I was not able to include the power that
sit-ins had in the
impact of the Movement. I wanted to inform you on the
story of the Freedom Riders and how
they rode through the South demanding
equality. Also, I wanted to include how they were
allowed by the police
chief to be beaten for about fifteen minutes in Anniston, Alabama.
Furthermore, I was not able to mention the end of "separate but equal" with
the U.S. Supreme
Court's decision on the case Brown vs. Board of Education.
Inclusion to this paper I hope that
you have enhanced your knowledge of the
Civil Rights Movement.
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RESOURCES: Events of the Civil Rights Movement
Books
Johnson, Jacqueline. Stokely Carmichael: The Story of Black Power.
Silver Burdett Press, Inc., a division of Simon & Schuster, Inc., Englewood
Cliffs, NJ,1990.
Hornsby and Straub. African American Chronology. Volume
I: 1492-1972. Gale Research International Limited., Detroit, Michigan, 1994.
The Editors of Ebony. Ebony Pictorial History of Black America. Volume
III: Civil Rights Movement to Black Revolution. Johnson Publishing Company,
Inc., Chicago, Illinios, 1974.
Television Program
"The Ku Klux
Klan: A Secret History." Narr. ?. Writ. and Prod.?. History Channel, March 11,
2000.
Internet
Lythgoe, Dennis. Desert News, February 26, 1997.
Address: http://members.aol.com/deverysa/index.html.
Host of writers.
http://cr.virtualscholar.com/cr10.htm