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Teacher’s Guide For A History of Civil Rights in America For grade 7 – College Series produced by Centre Communications, Inc. for Ambrose Video Publishing, Inc. Executive Producer William V. Ambrose Teacher's Guide by Mark Reeder Published and Distributed by... Ambrose Video Publishing 145 West 45th St., Suite 1115 New York, NY 10036 1–800–526–4663 24–Hour Fax 212–768–9282 http://www.ambrosevideo.com This DVD is the exclusive property of the copyright holder, Copying, transmitting or reproducing in any form, or by any means, without prior written permission from the copyright holder is prohibited (Title 17, U.S. Code Section 501 and 506). (c) MMV Ambrose Video Publishing, Inc. 1 Table of Contents Page Table of Contents and Rights……………………………………………………. 2 Materials in the Series…………………………………………………...….....… 3 Instructional Notes………………………………………………………………. 3 Introduction and Summary of Series………………………………………....…. 4 Links to Curriculum Standards………………………………………………….. 5 Summary of Programs (accessed through DVD Menu Screen under chapter selects) Program 1: 1774 - 1833………………………......................................... 6 Answers to Blackline Master Quiz 1A.......................................... 8 Program 2: 1834 - 1868………………………......................................... 8 Answers to Blackline Master Quiz 2A.......................................... 10 Program 3: 1869 - 1916………………………......................................... 10 Answers to Blackline Master Quiz 3A........................................... 13 Program 4: 1917 - 1926………………………......................................... 13 Answers to Blackline Master Quiz 4A........................................... 15 Program 5: 1927 - 1961………………………......................................... 15 Answers to Blackline Master Quiz 5A........................................... 17 Program 6: 1962 - 1965………………………......................................... 17 Answers to Blackline Master Quiz 6A.......................................... 20 Program 7: 1965 - 1993………………………......................................... 20 Answers to Blackline Master Quiz 7A.......................................... 22 Program 8: 1994 – 2010………………………........................................ 22 Answers to Blackline Master Quiz 8A........................................... 25 This DVD is closed–captioned. The purchase of this series entitles the user to the right to reproduce or duplicate, in whole or in part, this teacher's guide and the Test Question and Timeline handouts that accompany it for the purpose of teaching in conjunction with this series, A History of Civil Rights in America. This right is restricted only for use with this DVD series. Any reproduction or duplication in whole or in part of this guide and the handouts for any purpose other than for use with this series is prohibited. CLASSROOM/LIBRARY CLEARANCE NOTICE This series is for instructional use. The cost of the series includes public performance rights as long as no admission charge is made. Public performance rights are defined as viewing of a DVD in the course of face–to–face teaching activities in a classroom, library, or similar setting devoted to instruction. Closed Circuit Rights are included as a part of the public performance rights as long as closed–circuit transmission is restricted to a single campus. For multiple locations, call your Ambrose representative. Television/Cable/Satellite Rights are available. Call your Ambrose representative for details. 2 Duplication Rights are available if requested in large quantities. Call your Ambrose representative for details. Quantity Discounts are available for large purchases. Call your Ambrose representative for information and pricing. Discounts, and some special services, are not applicable outside the United States. Your suggestions and recommendations are welcome. Feel free to call Ambrose Video Publishing at 1–800–526–4663 between the hours of 9am and 5pm Eastern Time. MATERIALS IN THE SERIES Teacher's Guide – This Teacher's Guide has been prepared to aid the teacher in utilizing materials contained within this series. In addition to this introductory material, the guide contains the following: Suggested Instructional Notes Student Learning Goals Lesson Plans Test Questions on Blackline Masters Quizzes for duplication and handout to students Timeline of Events INSTRUCTIONAL NOTES It is suggested that you preview the series and read the Student Goals and Teacher Points. By doing so, you will become familiar with the materials and be better prepared to adapt the series to the needs of your class. Please note that each program is set up to be played continuously and you will probably find it best to follow the series and the programs in the order in which they are presented, but this is not necessary. Each program can be divided into chapters accessed through the DVD‟s Menu Screen under Chapter Selects. In this way each chapter can be played and studied separately. It is also suggested that the series presentation take place before the entire class and under your direction. As you review the instructional programs outlined in the Teacher's Guide, you may find it necessary to make some changes, deletions, or additions to fit the specific needs of your students. After viewing each program, you may wish to copy the Test Questions on Blackline Masters 1A, 2A, 3A ... and distribute it to your class to measure their comprehension of the events. INTRODUCTION AND SUMMARY OF SERIES A History of Civil Rights in America is a new approach to presenting the exciting history of Civil Rights from the founding of the United States to the present. By examining, significant moments, individuals and movements that have defined and extended individual civil rights for everyone in America, the series lays out the evolution of American civil rights in a way that promotes successful student learning. A History of Civil Rights in America begins with the nation‟s founding fathers and their creation of a federal government that would protect a citizen‟s civil rights as first set down in the 3 Declaration of Independence, the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. The series also shows how over the course of the last 230 years these civil rights have been extended to women, minorities, the common man, the American laborer, and gays and lesbians. A History of Civil Rights in America discusses how the U.S. Supreme Court, through the 14th Amendment, extended the Bill of Rights to state and local governments and thereby protected the voting rights of minorities and the civil rights of the accused when arrested. The eight programs are laid out so they can be viewed in their entirety, or by selecting individual chapters, be viewed separately. Each chapter presents a story of an historical figure or figures, events in the fight for civil rights, groundbreakers who opened doors for others to follow, and heroes and heroines who have had a distinctive impact on the extension of civil rights to every American. Most importantly, historical themes and figures are clearly presented using state of the art visuals that make learning easy and fun. Below is a list of the series‟ programs and their chapters. Using these programs, teachers can create a lesson plan to cover the specific issues, themes and historical figures mentioned. Program: 1: 1774 – 1833 1774 - Thomas Jefferson Writes A Summary View of the Rights of British America 1776 – America‟s Declaration of Independence Sets the Stage for Civil Rights 1791 –Bill of Rights Guarantees Civil Rights 1828 – Jacksonian Democracy Creates Universal White Male Suffrage 1833 – William Lloyd Garrison Founds the National Antislavery Society Program 2: 1834 – 1868 1837 – Horace Mann Leads the Way for Universal Education 1863 - The Road to Lincoln‟s Emancipation Proclamation 1865 – 13th Amendment Ends Slavery in America 1868 - 14th Amendment Lays the Foundation for Civil Rights for All Program 3: 1869 – 1916 1869 - 15th Amendment Extends the Right to Vote to Black Men 1879 - Standing Bear Becomes a Person 1884 - Joseph and Mary Tape Successfully Challenge San Francisco Public Schools 1886 – Through Yick Wo Supreme Court Establishes Equal Protection for Non Citizens 1909 - W.E.B. Du Bois Founds the NAACP 1916 – Louis Brandeis is the Champion of the Common Man Program 4: 1917 – 1926 1920 - Women Gain the Right to Vote 1924 – Gertrude Simmons Bonnin Begins the Revival of American Indian Rights 4 1925 –U.S. Supreme Court Begins Extending the Bill of Rights to the States 1926 - You Chung Hong Leads the Fight for Chinese American Civil Rights Program 5: 1927 – 1961 1935 - Mary McLeod Bethune: American Woman of the 20th Century 1943 - Magnuson Act Repeals the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 1948 – Harry S. Truman Initiates a Sea Change in American Civil Rights 1954 - Brown v. Board of Education 1955 - Rosa Parks is Arrested 1961 – U.S. Supreme Court Extends Fourth Amendment to the States Program 6: 1962 – 1965 1963 - Martin Luther King Jr.'s I Have a Dream Speech 1964 –Warren Court Strengthens „Innocent Until Proven Guilty‟ Through Miranda 1964 –Civil Rights Act Outlaws Discrimination Against Blacks and Women 1964 – 24th Amendment Prohibits Poll Taxes in Federal Elections 1964 – One Man, One Vote 1965 - Voting Rights Act is Passed Program 7: 1965 – 1993 1965 - Cesar Chavez Leads the Charge for Hispanic Civil Rights 1967 – Thurgood Marshall is the Champion for Black Rights 1970 – John Echohawk Founds the Native American Rights Fund 1971 –26th Amendment Gives 18 Year Olds the Right to Vote 1993 – Ruth Bader Ginsburg is Appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court Program 8: 1994 – 2010 2007 – Hispanics March for Civil Rights 2008 – Boumediene v Bush Confirms Due Process for Non Citizens 2008 – Barack Obama Wins the Presidency 2010 – „Don‟t Ask, Don‟t Tell‟ Repealed LINKS TO CURRICULUM STANDARDS The design for this series was guided by the National Center for History in the Schools, United States History curriculum Era 3: Revolution and the New Nation–Standards 1 and 3 for grades 5–12, Era 9 Postwar United States –Standard 4 for grades 5–12, and the California Public School Standards for Historical Content, Grade 8 – Standards 8.1, 8.2 and 8.3 (#4 – #7), Standard 8.8 (#1) and Grade 11, Standards 11.1 (#2, #3), 11.3 (#5), 11.5 – (#3, #4) and 11.10 (#2, #3) and Grade 12, Standards 12.1, 12.4 and 12.5. 5 SUMMARY OF PROGRAMS FOR A HISTORY OF CIVIL RIGHTS IN AMERICA Program: 1: 1774 – 1833 Program one examines how America‟s founding fathers created a government to protect the rights of the people, rights derived not from any government but from nature or God. Chapter one discusses how Thomas Jefferson wrote the principles and beliefs found in the Declaration of Independence two years earlier, using ideas from English Enlightenment thinkers. Chapter two shows how the Declaration of Independence is the preeminent manifesto of civil rights ever written. How each American‟s civil liberties are protected from the tyranny of government through the Bill of Rights is depicted in chapter three. In chapter four we see how the election of Andrew Jackson heralded an extension of the right to vote and hold high political office to the common man. How William Lloyd Garrison founded the nation‟s first great civil rights movement is shown in chapter five. 1774 - Thomas Jefferson Writes A Summary View of the Rights of British America Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: A democracy, like America, is a democracy based on a civil society that grants rights to its citizens o These rights are codified in laws Thomas Jefferson grappled with the question of where these rights come from Jefferson was a student of classical Rome and Greece and of the Enlightenment As a result, Jefferson wrote A Summary View of the Rights of British America o This pamphlet catalogued the complaints of colonists toward Britain o Colonists were treated as second rate citizens of the British Empire o England‟s capriciously manipulated the colonists‟ economic markets o Jefferson also put forth a second justification for the colonists‟ complaints o That each individual has "certain inalienable rights" o These rights exist with or without government o This class of rights became known as civil rights As a result of writing the 1774 pamphlet, Thomas Jefferson was asked to draft the Declaration of Independence 1776 – America’s Declaration of Independence Sets the Stage for Civil Rights Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: America's Independence Day celebrates an intellectual document 6 o The Declaration of Independence lays the groundwork for civil rights for the individual A committee of five men, led by Thomas Jefferson, was responsible for writing the Declaration of Independence On July 4th the Declaration of Independence passed the Congress with no negative votes cast against it The people eagerly accepted the document but they still had to win the war 1791 –Bill of Rights Guarantees Civil Rights Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: The colonists feared a tyrannical government that would take away their civil rights As a result James Madison drafted the Bill of Rights o This Bill of Rights was to protect those rights the colonists had fought the Revolutionary War to obtain o These rights were the individual‟s rights guaranteed by law The Bill of Rights was ratified by the states and implemented in 1791 A summary of the Bill of Rights‟ ten Amendments 1828 – Jacksonian Democracy Creates Universal White Male Suffrage Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: The founding fathers had been part of a political, social and economic elite that gave stability to a struggling new nation o America‟s founding fathers distrusted mob rule o They feared the common man did not have the capacity to vote or hold high public office Andrew Jackson was the champion of the common man in American society The election of Andrew Jackson was about broadening the base of American politics and bringing in the common man o As a result the common white man got the right to vote 1833 – William Lloyd Garrison Founds the National Antislavery Society Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: Slavery began in the United States in 1619 Within two generations a system of hereditary of slavery for blacks began By 1775 a half million blacks were considered property not citizens o A black writer, Lemuel Haynes, would bring into focus the fight to abolish slavery in the United States o That fight became known as the abolitionist movement 7 The seeds of the movement began in 1740 when English preacher George Whitefield preached the immorality of owning slaves William Lloyd Garrison launched the American Anti-Slavery Society in 1833 o His newspaper, The Liberator became the spokespiece for abolition o Garrison‟s leadership was joined by others, including Wendell Phillips, Frederick Douglass, Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton In the end the Constitutional crisis of property rights versus civil rights would be solved only by the Civil War Answers to Blackline Master Quiz 1A 1 – c; 2 – d; 3 – a; 4 – b; 5 – d; 6 – b; 7 – a & d; 8 – d; 9 – c; 10 - c Program 2: 1834 – 1868 Program two looks at the beginning of the American concept of universal education as well as expanding the idea of all men are created equal to include Blacks. Chapter one looks at how Horace Mann envisioned universal education as a steppingstone to greater personal freedom and greater awareness of the need for broader civil rights. The compromises made between „free‟ states and „slave‟ states during the first half of the 19th century is outlined in chapter two. The third chapter examines how the 13th amendment not only ended slavery but set Blacks on the road to gaining civil rights. Chapter four looks at how the 14th amendment laid the foundation for prohibiting state and local governments from abridging individual civil liberties. 1837 – Horace Mann Leads the Way for Universal Education Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: Americans understand the importance of universal and equal education for all to produce enlightened citizens capable of self-government Fulfilling this realization fell to educational visionary, Horace Mann Before Mann education was largely the right of the wealthy In 1838 Horace Mann put forth his six principles of public education o What these six principles are o These principles have served America well They have also produced heated civil and equal rights conflicts, including Brown v Board of Education in 1954 Even in the 21st century America has not fully realized Horace Mann‟s vision of a universally enlightened citizenry 8 1863 - The Road to Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: Slavery was the biggest blight on the U.S. Constitution, written in 1787 o The document protected the natural rights of men and a citizen‟s civil rights o Yet it also preserved slavery and deprived Blacks from enjoying those same natural and civil rights As the nation grew a fight brewed between the free North and the slave South The slavery issues were mitigated through a series of compromises to maintain an equal number of free and slave states in the U.S. Senate o The first of these was the Missouri Compromise of 1820 o The second was known as the Compromise of 1850 Then in 1857 the Supreme Court‟s Dred Scott decision invalidated the Missouri Compromise and defined slaves as property, without civil or natural rights Civil War was inevitable When Abraham Lincoln became president in 1861, eleven states seceded The war began on April 12th 1861 o For the first two years the war went horribly for the North o Defeat after defeat weakened the Union‟s resolve to hold the U.S. together o The only way to save the Union was to make the war about ending slavery o As a result, Lincoln issued his famous Emancipation Proclamation Lincoln‟s words rallied the northern abolitionists When the war ended, the 13th Amendment abolished slavery, ending the Constitution‟s immoral contradiction 1865 – 13th Amendment Ends Slavery in America Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: The Civil War pitted the Northern free states against the Southern slave states The war ended with a Northern victory The North abolished slavery by amending the U.S. Constitution The North set up new governments in the southern states run by black freedmen and northern liberals The text of the 13th Amendment Ironically, the 13th Amendment, while abolishing slavery, did nothing to guarantee a Black man‟s civil rights Those were rights that would take another 100 years to win 1868 - 14th Amendment Lays the Foundation for Civil Rights for All Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: The text of the 14th Amendment Today Americans enjoy many civil rights protected from intrusion by the Federal Government, by the Constitution and the Bill of Rights 9 But for the first 90 years of the U.S. state and local governments did not have to follow the Bill of Rights when dealing with their citizens Then in 1866, Congress passed the 14th Amendment The 14th Amendment applied the Bill of Rights to state and local governments Over the last 140 years, the U.S. Supreme Court has held that the Amendment's „Due Process Clause‟ incorporates the Bill of Rights to the states o The 14th Amendment‟s equal protection clause says state and local governments cannot deny to one group the benefit of laws it extends to another group The 14th Amendment has become the great equalizer when it comes to education, racial and gender discrimination With passage of the 14th Amendment, the United States had the tools to begin the march towards equal and civil rights for all Americans Answers to Blackline Master Quiz 2A 1 – a; 2 – c; 3 – a & d; 4 – b; 5 – c; 6 – b; 7 – c; 8 – c & d; 9 - a Program 3: 1869 – 1916 Program three investigates the movements that extended civil rights to Blacks, ChineseAmericans, American Indians, and Jewish Americans. Chapter one discusses the 15th Amendment and giving the right to vote to Black men. Chapter two shows how American Indians fought to become U.S. citizens. Chapter three profiles Chinese Americans Mary and Joseph Tape‟s struggle to have their daughter be a part of the American educational system. Chapter four shows how San Francisco‟s Chinese laundry men used the 14th Amendment to fight for the right to run their own laundry businesses. How W.E.B. Dubois started the first Black civil rights movement is discussed in chapter five. Chapter six looks at Louis Brandeis, champion of the common man. 1869 - 15th Amendment Extends the Right to Vote to Black Men Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: After the Civil War Blacks knew they were no longer property But culturally, Blacks were still slaves compared to the dominant white society o They had no resources to pursue their rights o Blacks didn‟t own property; there were no black schools; no black lawyers, politicians or government bureaucrats to protect their civil rights The right to vote would move them forward on the course of true freedom and on course to exercising their civil rights 10 In1869 the Radical Republicans passed the 15th Amendment o The 15th Amendment said states could not deny the right to vote to U.S. citizens on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude Some Radicals saw the 15th Amendment as a way to punish the south Others saw it as a means to correct the errors of the Constitution and extend the ideals of the Declaration of Independence to all citizens of the United States 1879 - Standing Bear Becomes a Person Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: Standing Bear was a Ponca Indian Chief, whose court case gave American Indians the right to be citizens The story behind Standing Bear‟s court case o In 1878 Chief Standing Bear tried to return to the Poncas' ancestral lands o He and other Poncas were arrested o Indians were not U.S. citizens and could be imprisoned without due process o Standing Bear sued for a writ of habeas corpus Habeas Corpus gives American citizens the right to know why the government has imprisoned them Standing Bear went to trial on May 11th in Omaha, Nebraska and won As a result of Standing Bear‟s courage, American Indians were now citizens of the United States of America It would take many years for the full impact of the ruling to be achieved o It was not until 1924 that Congress passed the Indian Citizenship Act 1884 - Joseph and Mary Tape Successfully Challenge San Francisco Public Schools Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: With the downturn of the economy in the western U.S., whites began, excluding Chinese Americans from working and denying them an education A Chinese American couple, Joseph and Mary Tape from San Francisco, challenged the law banning Chinese from an education The Tapes knew hard work and education would make their children successful In 1884 the Tapes sued to get their daughter Mamie into school and won o California Superior Court Justice McGuire agreed with the Tapes and the California Supreme Court upheld justice McGuire‟s decision o The California Supreme Court also ruled that the doctrine of „separate but equal‟ could be applied to Chinese American students o As a result, the San Francisco School Board created a separate Asian school for all Chinese American children The separate but equal education continued until the 1950s when the U.S. Supreme Court banned it Daughter Mamie and her brother Frank were the first pupils to appear at the Chinese Primary School, which opened in April 1885 11 1886 – Through Yick Wo Supreme Court Establishes Equal Protection for Non Citizens Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: The case of Yick Wo v. Hopkins was one of the most important cases for minority civil rights in U.S. history The case involved San Francisco‟s laundry businesses Since Chinese Americans had been excluded from many professions, they went into the laundry business The facts of the case were o In 1880, San Francisco passed an ordinance that persons could no longer operate a laundry in wooden buildings without a permit o 95% of laundries were in wooden structures o Two-thirds of the laundries were owned by Chinese, but no permits were granted to Chinese Americans o This was the first case testing the Equal Protection Clause in the Fourteenth Amendment o The U.S. Supreme Court decided that laws had to be applied equally to all people in America, even non-citizens In 1954 the Supreme Court used the principle established in Yick Wo to strike down the deep south‟s segregation laws Yick Wo would be the deciding factor in over 150 Supreme Court cases upholding the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution 1909 - W.E.B. Du Bois Founds the NAACP Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: Racism existed throughout the United States in the first half of the century In the first half of the 20th century, W.E.B. Du Bois shaped and guided the black movement for civil rights and equality In 1906 W.E.B. Du Bois advocated total equality for blacks In 1909 Du Bois founded the NAACP The NAACP would lead the charge for civil rights as well as social and economic equality 1916 – Louis Brandeis is the Champion of the Common Man Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: Louis Brandeis is one of those figures who was a pioneer in American life o He was a Jewish Supreme Court Justice, the so-called people‟s attorney, a major public figure, and a leader of the American Zionist movement Louis D. Brandeis was born on November 13th 1856 in Louisville, Kentucky Early on he learned a compassionate morality and idealism from his parents In 1916 Brandeis became the first Jewish American to join the Supreme Court 12 Brandeis believed in and cared about the common man He argued for laws regulating how many hours American workers worked Brandeis opened the door for other Jewish Americans to sit on the Supreme Court Louis Brandeis retired from the Supreme Court in 1939 and died two years later Answers to Blackline Master Quiz 3A 1 – a; 2 – c; 3 – b; 4 – a; 5 – a; 6 – b; 7 – c; 8 - c Program 4: 1917 – 1926 Program four examines how women, American Indians, and Chinese-Americans further solidified their claims to civil rights. In addition, it shows how the Supreme Court applied the 14th amendment to the states. Chapter one looks at how women finally gained the basic civil right to vote. The heroic efforts of Gertrude Simmons Bonnin in preserving American Indian cultures and having all American Indians recognized as citizens is examined in chapter two. How conservative Chief Justice William Howard Taft used the Supreme Court ruling to extend the 14th Amendment to state and local governments is outlined in chapter three. Chapter four discusses the life and accomplishments of the Chinese American champion for civil rights, You Chung Hong. 1920 - Women Gain the Right to Vote Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: Susan B. Anthony had drafted the call for the right to vote in 1848 at the Seneca Falls Convention The first amendment giving women the right to vote was introduced in Congress in 1878 and defeated Throughout the early 1900‟s, women pushed for equal rights with men, but nothing more symbolized that equality than the right to vote The 19th Amendment gave women the right to vote in 1920 1924 – Gertrude Simmons Bonnin Begins the Revival of American Indian Rights Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: In the decades following the last battle of the Plains Indians War at Wounded Knee in 1890, American Indian cultures faced complete obliteration by the dominant white culture o Laws forbade the practice of their ceremonies, religion and dress o The Dawes Act of 1887 forbade the communal ownership of land o Communal ownership was an essential piece of Indian philosophy Gertrude Simmons Bonnin‟s heroic efforts would not let American Indians disappear 13 Born on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota, she became a teacher and an American Indian rights activist While teaching at Pennsylvania‟s Carlisle Indian Industrial School, she learned how white culture was robbing Indians of their culture and language Her book on Oklahoma‟s Indians opened the door to repealing the Dawes Act and passage of FDR‟s Indian Reorganization Act of 1934 Bonnin‟s efforts reversed the white culture‟s attempt to eradicate American Indian culture 1925 –U.S. Supreme Court Begins Extending the Bill of Rights to the States Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: The decade of the Roaring Twenties was a period of great transition o The decade started with great social promise in passing the 18th and 19th Amendments o But the twenties rapidly deteriorated into a period of intense conflicts of values o The phrase that best sums up the Roaring Twenties, was “the Business of America is business” o But in spite of the Roaring Twenties‟ turmoil, one of the most far-reaching advancements in the evolution of civil rights for all Americans emerged In 1925 remarkable Supreme Court case Gitlow v. New York began the process of forcing states and local governments to abide by the Constitution‟s Bill of Rights The case arose, out of the threat to the country‟s democracy - the rise of the anarchists The anarchists advocated the violent overthrow of the U.S. government As a result, Federal and state governments clamped down on people‟s civil rights One of the people caught was a New York Socialist Party member, Benjamin Gitlow Gitlow was convicted for publishing a Left-Wing Manifesto that called for the overthrow of the U.S. government Although the Court ruled against Gitlow, it also ruled that the 14th Amendment extended the reach of the First Amendment to the states The Supreme Court would go on to use this logic of incorporation to extend more of the Bill of Rights to the states 1926 - You Chung Hong Leads the Fight for Chinese American Civil Rights Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: Every minority in America has had one person spearhead the fight for equal rights For Chinese Americans it was the great lawyer, You Chung Hong 19th century Chinese Americans helped build America into an industrial powerhouse o Even so, they were not considered Americans by many whites 14 o They were denied civil rights as well as the right to become citizens The drive by Chinese Americans to gain civil rights and equality began right after passage of the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 o The first advance was Yick Wo v. Hopkins in 1886 o The U.S. Supreme Court ruled U.S. laws applied to Chinese Americans Chinese Americans still needed a champion to fight against racism and discrimination That champion was You Chung Hong Hong worked hard for Chinese American equality and the repeal of the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 Hong‟s efforts led to broad reforms o The repeal of the Chinese Exclusion Act in 1943 o Immigration reform that opened the door for Chinese to immigrate to America o Equal rights and liberties for Chinese Americans Answers to Blackline Master Quiz 4A 1 – c; 2 – a; 3 – b; 4 – c; 5 – b; 6 – d; 7 – b; 8 - b Program 5: 1927 – 1961 Program five examines how a major shift in American consciousness concerning the rights of Blacks led to the greatest civil rights movement the nation has ever seen. Chapter one examines the life of civil rights worker Mary McLeod Bethune who worked with the Franklin Delano Roosevelt administration to end segregation in the federal government. How the sixty year old Chinese Exclusion Act was overturned is shown in chapter two. Chapter three discusses how President Harry Truman initiated a sea change in American attitudes toward Blacks by de-segregating the U.S. military. How Brown v Board of Education ended the infamous „separate but equal‟ doctrine of 1896 is examined in chapter four. In chapter five, Rosa Parks‟ famous refusal to give up her seat on a Montgomery, Alabama bus jump started the end to legal discrimination in the United States. Chapter six shows how the U. S. Supreme Court strengthened due process for all citizens, thereby limiting the governmental power of states and local authorities over the individual. 1935 - Mary McLeod Bethune: American Woman of the 20th Century Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: Mary McLeod Bethune founded Bethune Cookman College in 1923 Bethune founded the National Council of Negro Women in 1935 15 Bethune was a key leader in getting Franklin Delano Roosevelt to end discrimination in the defense industry in 1941 1943 - Magnuson Act Repeals the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: Angel Island Immigration Center is located in San Francisco Bay‟s China Cove o Opened in 1910, its sole purpose was to stop Chinese immigration into the U.S o In 1943 after the repeal of the Chinese Exclusion Act, the island‟s station was no longer necessary In 1952, Congress passed the Immigration and Nationality Act, which allowed Chinese to become U.S. citizens through naturalization rather than just by birth In 1965, President Lyndon Johnson signed the Hart-Celler Act, ending the limited Chinese immigration quotas Over the last 40 years, nearly a million Chinese have entered the United States They have blended their unique culture into America‟s melting pot 1948 – Harry S. Truman Initiates a Sea Change in American Civil Rights Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: As President Harry S. Truman, led the transformation in the American consciousness toward civil rights for minorities in the United States When the Civil War ended slavery in 1865, Blacks endured cruel Jim Crow laws, segregation, and discrimination in all aspects of American life Then in 1940 Truman took up the challenge of civil rights for Blacks For the next twelve years, Truman would prove to be a visionary leader in the extension of civil rights to Black Americans o Truman set up a President‟s Committee on Civil Rights o Truman helped by America‟s first Black General, Benjamin Oliver Davis Sr., wrote Executive Order # 9981, desegregating America‟s military The process of integration was completed after the Korean War Integration of the Armed Services was put to the test in the Vietnam War In Vietnam integration of the Armed Services was a major success Truman‟s pioneering efforts would jumpstart the modern civil rights movement 1954 - Brown v. Board of Education Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: Prior to the 1950‟s equal opportunity for blacks in education, work, politics and housing was non-existent With Truman's executive order desegregating the armed services in 1948, the tide began to shift Desegregation for the nation and its schools began with Brown v. Board of Education 16 On May 17th 1954, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled against segregation in public schools Desegregation of public schools was a major step in Blacks gaining civil rights 1955 - Rosa Parks is Arrested Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: On December 1st 1955, Mrs. Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat in the front of a Montgomery, Alabama city bus to a white passenger Blacks refused to ride Montgomery‟s buses until the segregation laws were abolished and the bus system integrated The boycott lasted for 382 days In December 1956 the Supreme Court decided that the Montgomery bus segregation codes violated the Constitution The boycott showcased a rising star in civil rights, Martin Luther King Jr. 1961 – U.S. Supreme Court Extends Fourth Amendment to the States Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: The 4th Amendment protects against illegal search and seizure by the police Defense against state government trespass was not protected by the Constitution until 1961 Mapp v. Ohio was responsible for the exclusionary rule - excluding from trial any illegally obtained evidence The text of the 4th Amendment Answers to Blackline Master Quiz 5A 1 – a; 2 – c; 3 – d; 4 – b; 5 – a; 6 – c; 7 – b; 8 – d; 9 – b; 10 - a Program 6: 1962 – 1965 Program six shows how the promise of the Declaration of Independence was finally extended to blacks through four monumental pieces of legislation. At the same time, the Supreme Court strengthened the rights of the accused through its landmark Miranda ruling. Chapter one examines Martin Luther King Jr.‟s monumental I Have a Dream speech and its impact on the American consciousness to extend civil rights to Blacks. The importance of the 1964 Civil Rights Act in preserving civil rights for all Americans is discussed in chapter two. Chapters three, four and five examine how laws ending poll taxes, implementing „one man one vote,‟ and securing voting rights for Blacks opened the door for Blacks to enter politics and have their votes counted equally. 17 1963 - Martin Luther King Jr.'s I Have a Dream Speech Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: On August 28, 1963, Martin Luther King Jr. gave his I Have a Dream speech He addressed 250,000 men and women, black and white, assembled in Washington for a march to support the civil-rights bill in Congress Largely through King's leadership, segregation as the nation had known it for nearly 70 years would end In 1960, blacks staged sit-ins at lunch counters throughout the south In 1961, Freedom Riders rode buses throughout the south, purposely ignoring signs indicating segregated seating King was assassinated on April 4, 1968, in Memphis, Tennessee 1964 –Warren Court Strengthens ‘Innocent Until Proven Guilty’ Through Miranda Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: Who Chief Justice Earl Warren was The Warren Court was the most liberal court in the nation's history Protecting the rights of the accused was the Warren Court's most important and lasting legacy The Miranda warning The three cases that form the basis of the Miranda warnings used by police 1964 –Civil Rights Act Outlaws Discrimination Against Blacks and Women Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: The 1964 Civil Rights Act set out to right three centuries of racial injustice o It ended racial discrimination in public places, theaters, restaurants and hotels o It required employers to provide equal employment opportunities o It gave the federal government power to cut off funds, if it found evidence of discrimination based on color, race gender or ethnicity John F. Kennedy promised a new Civil Rights Act in the 1960 campaign After President Kennedy was assassinated, President Lyndon Baines Johnson took up the cause The stage was set for the modern era of the civil rights struggle in America 1964 – 24th Amendment Prohibits Poll Taxes in Federal Elections Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: Throughout the first half of the 20th century, blacks lived under the oppression of Jim Crow Laws o These laws were designed specifically to discriminate against blacks in housing, employment and education 18 o These laws also kept blacks from exercising their fundamental civil rights as citizens In the 1950‟s, blacks began to win those rights through court cases and civil actions o In 1954, the Supreme Court ruled in Brown v. Board of Education that segregated schools were unconstitutional o In 1955 Rosa Parks started a civil action that desegregated Montgomery, Alabama‟s city buses 1964 saw the greatest single gains by blacks with the Civil Rights Act and the 24th Amendment o The Civil Rights Act of 1964 outlawed discrimination in public places o The 24th Amendment tore down the last barrier preventing blacks from exercising their right to vote by prohibiting poll taxes 1964 – One Man, One Vote Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: In the 21st century, the „one man, one vote‟ standard means a person‟s vote counts as much as anyone else‟s This hasn‟t always been the case for the United States The election of the President does not embrace the „one man, one vote‟ rule o Election of the President employs an Electoral College o Each state has a specific number of electors based on the number of Congressmen o The failure of one-man one-vote can be seen in the 2000 Presidential election o Al Gore won the popular vote but lost in the Electoral College by 5 votes The biggest abuse of the „one man one vote‟ standard is at the state level Since the 19th century, state politicians have voting district boundaries Voting districts were shaped to give voters in one district more power than those in another o This is called gerrymandering o Gerrymandering took on a racial tone after the American Civil War o White politicians created districts that put tens of thousands of black voters in one large contorted black district o Other districts were created with only a few hundred whites in each o Black voters were marginalized and couldn‟t gain positions of power It took until the Civil Rights movement of the 1960‟s to correct this injustice In 1964 the U. S. Supreme Court outlawed gerrymandering o It instituted the now famous "one-man, one-vote" standard for legislative redistricting o The Court held that each individual voter had to be weighted equally in legislative apportionment 19 1965 - Voting Rights Act is Passed Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: Amidst a background of riots led by urban blacks, Congress passed the National Voting Rights Act of 1965 This act has been called the single most effective piece of civil rights legislation ever passed by Congress The federal government could stop all arcane state and local voting restrictions The national government could supervise polling places anywhere in the nation This act marked an end to the legal side of the hundred year march for blacks towards full civil rights - full citizenship What remained was gaining full equality and an end to all minority discrimination Answers to Blackline Master Quiz 6A 1 – b; 2 – d; 3 – b; 4 – d; 5 – a = f, b = d, c = e; 6 – c; 7 – a; 8 – c; 9 – a; 10 – b; 11 - a Program 7: 1965 – 1993 Program seven discusses the era of the great civil rights leaders and how they helped usher in a time of great change in the civil rights of all Americans for the betterment of all Americans. Chapter one shows how Cesar Chavez worked tirelessly to restore land grants, gain equal pay for fieldworkers and obtain basic civil rights for Hispanic Americans. Chapter two examines the life of Thurgood Marshall who, by sitting on the U.S. Supreme Court, became a symbol for all Americans of their right to their civil rights How John Echohawk overcame unique challenges securing full civil rights for American Indians is presented in chapter three. Chapter four discusses the life of Ruth Bader Ginsburg who faced gender discrimination and by overcoming it laid the groundwork for all women to enjoy full civil rights. 1965 - Cesar Chavez Leads the Charge for Hispanic Civil Rights Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: Cesar Chavez‟s Farm Workers‟ Strike in 1965 signaled the beginning of the Hispanic Civil rights movement The Movement encompassed a broad range of issues - restoration of land grants, farm workers rights, equality in education and voter rights Chavez started the United Farm Workers of America to help migrant farm workers The Hispanic Civil Rights Movement was also known as the Chicano Civil Rights Movement o It focused on improving conditions for Hispanic Americans 20 In the present century, the issue of Hispanic rights has re-emerged over illegal immigration 1967 – Thurgood Marshall is the Champion for Black Rights Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: In 1933, Thurgood Marshall became a lawyer specializing in civil rights cases His „Marshall Plan‟ used the courts to end segregation and discrimination in the United States Marshall was the lead counsel on Brown v. Board of Education In 1967 he was appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court Everyday we live with the legacy of Justice Thurgood Marshall 1970 – John Echohawk Founds the Native American Rights Fund Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: The necessity of American Indians to be brought into the mainstream of society from the strength of the treaties they signed with the Federal Government The necessity of Indian nations to hold the federal government to its legal, moral obligation, and humanitarian obligation to those treaties that were signed The importance of John Echohawk‟s founding of the Native American Rights Fund for tribal rights John Echohawk‟s life and his decision to study law The root causes behind the problems of American Indians in the 20th century o Indians had a lot of rights under the law but no lawyers to enforce those rights John Echohawk has achieved more for American Indian civil and tribal rights than any other person in the 20th and 21st centuries One of the first issues that NARF took on was the reversal of the federal policy on termination of tribes o That termination policy was gone o A new policy of Indian self determination, where Indians continued to live under their treaties and tribal governments, really took off 1971 –26th Amendment Gives 18 Year Olds the Right to Vote Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: In the 60s and 70s 18-year old Americans were fighting for their country in Vietnam but did not have the right to vote On March 23rd 1971, Congress resolved this contradiction by passing the 26th Amendment o It lowered the national voting age in all elections from 21 to 18 1972 was the first Presidential election in which 18 year olds could vote o 55% of 18-24 year olds cast their ballots 21 1993 – Ruth Bader Ginsburg is Appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: Ruth Bader Ginsberg is the legal champion for American women o She is in the same company of jurists as Thurgood Marshall She was born on March 15th 1933 to Jewish parents in Brooklyn, New York Ruth Bader Ginsburg was the second woman to sit on the U.S. Supreme Court She was the legal architect of the modern women's movement o She showed that many of the nation‟s laws encouraged gender discrimination o She worked tirelessly to right this wrong Throughout her career, Ginsberg has had to fight her way, in the face of discrimination, through the male-dominated world of law Answers to Blackline Master Quiz 7A 1 – b; 2 – c; 3 – c; 4 – c; 5 – d; 6 – b; 7 – c; 8 - c Program 8: 1994 – 2010 Program eight discusses the first great civil rights issues of the 21st century – immigration, due process and gays in the U.S. military. Chapter one examines the contentious issue of illegal immigration versus the uniquely American credo of inclusion. Chapter two discusses how the capture and detention of foreign combatants raised questions of the rights of non-citizens to traditional U.S. legal protections. How the election of the first Black President of the United States represented the culmination of over 300 years of civil rights struggles on behalf of millions of Black citizens is examined in chapter three. Chapter four shows how the repeal of the military‟s „Don‟t ask, don‟t tell‟ policy ended a centuries long policy of discrimination against gays and lesbians. 2007 – Hispanics March for Civil Rights Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: On May 1st 2006, nearly one million Hispanics and other people from all nationalities and walks of life marched in cities across America o It was the largest, nationwide protest since the Vietnam War Era o It was a protest against proposed anti-immigration laws Illegal immigration has created a great divide in America o Some people support some form of amnesty for illegal immigrants o Others want to see them rounded up and deported In 2007 the number of illegal immigrants officially topped 11 million Unofficially, the count was more like 20 to 30 million 22 Opponents to illegal immigration made demands to seal off the 2200 mile border with Mexico, increase border patrols, and deport illegal immigrants Supporters emphasized that illegal immigrants had been here for many years and deserved to stay o They worked hard, paid taxes o The money they spent boosted the U.S. economy o Their children were born here, attended local schools and were growing up American o They performed difficult jobs such as construction, and most importantly, worked the agricultural fields of the southwest and California. President George W. Bush, Senator John McCain and many Democrats proposed a guest worker program The opposition characterized the solution as an amnesty program that rewarded illegals for breaking the law o They also brought up national security concerns Late in 2007, the issue was shelved for the next Congressional session In the first decade of the 21st century, Hispanic political power was on the rise Many political pundits believed the Hispanic vote determined the decade‟s three presidential elections The problem of illegal immigration still looms over the country State and local authorities are still hard pressed to deal with the pressure The Illegal immigration issue will be dealt with later in the 21st century 2008 – Boumediene v Bush Confirms Due Process for Non Citizens Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: On September 11th 2001, jetliners piloted by Islamic terrorists slammed into New York City‟s World Trade Center and Washington, D.C.‟s Pentagon As a result, the U.S. forces invaded Afghanistan, removed al-Qaeda, and captured many men who were believed to be terrorists These men were detained indefinitely on the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba as enemy combatants As enemy combatants, the Bush administration said they had no access to due process in American courts American civil liberties groups began agitating for these so-called enemy combatants to be charged with a crime in America‟s civil courts In 2008, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in the case of Boumediene v Bush that Guantanamo Bay prisoners had a right to habeas corpus under the United States Constitution Remarkably, a conservative U.S. Supreme Court held that the right of due process applies to non-citizens The ruling acknowledged that human rights - the rights of all persons - are superior to citizenship 23 2008 – Barack Obama Wins the Presidency Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: Barack Obama‟s election as President changed America o A change from a 350 year-old era when blacks were thought of as second class citizens to when a black man could become President of the U.S. A brief outline of Barack Obama‟s life o He was born in Hawaii to a white mother and a black father o It was a time of segregation and Jim Crow laws in the South o A time of black urban poverty in the North o Growing up was not easy, but Obama came to terms with his biracial heritage o His early life helped him develop a core understanding that all people are equal and are to be loved equally o Obama‟s belief transcended race as an issue for both blacks and whites o It was a personal triumph and worldview that would lead to making Barack Obama a leader in a new America o Barack Obama graduated from Columbia College and Harvard Law School o He worked as a community organizer in Chicago Obama‟s remarkable rise in politics began in 1996 when he was elected an Illinois State Senator In 2002, he opposed the Iraq War In 2004, he was elected a U.S. Senator and delivered a keynote speech at the Democratic National Convention o His speech talked of only one America o His speech delivered a new vision for America o America transcended divisions in race, class, gender, and most importantly, divisive political ideologies o This speech launched Obama‟s candidacy as the Democratic Party‟s nominee for President three years later Throughout his campaign, his theme was change and the change was his vision Obama was swept into office by the biggest majority of voters in 18 years A new chapter in American history was about to unfold as a result of this singular black man, Barack Obama 2010 – ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ Repealed Student Goals – In this A History of Civil Rights in America chapter the students will learn: For the first 235 years of our country‟s existence, gays and lesbians had to serve secretly in America‟s military o Same sex preference was deemed not only immoral but degenerate Following the Stonewall Riots of 1969, gay rights activists began agitating for the same rights as other Americans Though social norms shifted, still America‟s armed forces continued to ban homosexuals from serving Yet thousands of gays and lesbians were serving 24 The answer of how to treat these brave men and women came down to President Bill Clinton‟s famous „Don‟t Ask, Don‟t Tell‟ compromise of 1993 o The military could no longer ask men and women about their sexual preference o Gay servicemen and women were encouraged not to tell anyone of their sexual preference As a result, they were denied one of American citizen‟s most cherished civil rights - freedom of expression This denial of a basic civil right finally ended on December 22nd 2010 with the repeal of „Don‟t Ask, Don‟t Tell‟ o The repeal opened the door for gays and lesbians to serve openly in every branch of the U.S. military Answers to Blackline Master Quiz 8A 1 – b; 2 – a; 3 – a & b; 4 – a & c; 5 – b; 6 – a; 7 – b; 8 – d; 9 – c; 10 - b 25