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Chapter Introduction
Section 1: The Civil Rights Movement
Section 2: Kennedy and Johnson
Section 3: The Struggle Continues
Section 4: Other Groups Seek Rights
Visual Summary
The Civil Rights Movement
Essential Question What were the legal and
social challenges to racial segregation in the
1940s and 1950s?
Kennedy and Johnson
Essential Question How were Kennedy and
Johnson alike and different as presidents of the
United States?
The Struggle Continues
Essential Question What areas of civil rights
did groups try to improve in the 1960s, and
what methods did those groups use?
Other Groups Seek Rights
Essential Question How did the civil rights
movement affect minorities other than African
Americans?
What were the legal and social
challenges to racial segregation in
the 1940s and 1950s?
Reading Guide
Content Vocabulary
• segregation
• boycott
• integrate
• civil disobedience
Academic Vocabulary
• discriminate
• civil
Reading Guide (cont.)
Key People and Events
• NAACP
• Thurgood Marshall
• Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas
• Rosa Parks
• Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
When necessary, should the military
be used to enforce Supreme Court
decisions?
A. Yes
B. No
A. A
B. B
0%
B
A
0%
Equality in Education
After World War II, African
Americans and other supporters of
civil rights challenged discrimination
in the nation’s public schools.
Equality in Education (cont.)
• African Americans had suffered from racism
and discrimination since colonial times.
• They fought for equal opportunities in jobs,
housing, and education and fought against
segregation—the separation of people of
different races.
School Segregation, 1950
Equality in Education (cont.)
• When change did not come as quickly as
desired, African Americans’ determination to
end injustices in the United States led to the
rise of the civil rights movement.
School Segregation, 1950
Equality in Education (cont.)
• In the 1950s, lawyers for the NAACP
(National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People) searched for cases they
could use to challenge the laws allowing the
segregation of public schools.
• Thurgood Marshall, the chief lawyer for the
NAACP, decided to challenge the idea of
“separate but equal” established in 1896 in
Plessy v. Ferguson.
School Segregation, 1950
Equality in Education (cont.)
• On May 17, 1954, the Supreme Court
unanimously ruled in Brown v. Board of
Education of Topeka, Kansas, that it was
unconstitutional to separate schoolchildren
by race.
• The Court also called on school authorities
to make plans for integrating—bringing
races together—in public schools.
School Segregation, 1950
Equality in Education (cont.)
• In 1957, Arkansas governor Orval Faubus
called out the state’s National Guard to
prevent African Americans from entering a
Little Rock high school.
– For the first time since the Civil War, a
Southern state defied the federal
government.
School Segregation, 1950
Equality in Education (cont.)
• President Eisenhower sent hundreds of
federal soldiers to Little Rock to patrol the
school and protect the students.
School Segregation, 1950
Who argued against “separate but
equal” schools before the Supreme
Court?
A. Earl Warren
0%
D
0%
A
D. Thurgood Marshall
A
B
C
0%
D
C
C. George Houser
A.
B.
C.
0%
D.
B
B. James Farmer
Gains on Other Fronts
The success of the Montgomery bus
boycott showed that nonviolent
protest could help African
Americans secure their rights.
Gains on Other Fronts (cont.)
• On the evening of December 1, 1955, Rosa
Parks, an African American, was told to
move to the rear of the bus to make room for
a white passenger.
– Parks refused, and at the next bus stop,
she was taken off the bus by police,
arrested for breaking the law, and fined
$10.
Gains on Other Fronts (cont.)
• Rosa Parks’s arrest led African Americans in
Montgomery to organize a boycott of the
city’s buses.
• At a boycott meeting, a relatively unknown
Baptist minister, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.,
made an impact on the crowd with his
passionate words.
Gains on Other Fronts (cont.)
• The bus boycott lasted for more than a year,
but eventually the Supreme Court ruled that
the Montgomery bus segregation law was
unconstitutional and the boycott ended.
• With the victory in Montgomery, Dr. King
became a leader of the civil rights
movement.
• Dr. King used protest methods based on
civil disobedience, or the refusal to obey
laws that are considered unjust.
What method did African Americans
use to fight discrimination on
Montgomery buses?
A. Violence
0%
D
0%
A
D. Strike
A
B
C
0%
D
C
C. Boycott
A.
B.
C.
0%
D.
B
B. Civil disobedience
How were Kennedy and Johnson
alike and different as presidents of
the United States?
Reading Guide
Content Vocabulary
• poverty line
• Medicaid
• Medicare
Academic Vocabulary
• assign
• consist
Reading Guide (cont.)
Key People and Events
• John F. Kennedy
• New Frontier
• Lyndon B. Johnson
• Great Society
• Job Corps
• Civil Rights Act of 1964
Rate your agreement with the following
statement: The government should provide
health care for American citizens.
A. Strongly agree
0%
D
0%
A
D. Strongly disagree
A
B
C
0%
D
C
C. Somewhat disagree
A.
B.
C.
0%
D.
B
B. Somewhat agree
Kennedy and the New Frontier
John F. Kennedy’s presidency
appealed to many Americans who
wanted change.
Kennedy and the New Frontier (cont.)
• In the presidential election of 1960,
Republican candidate Vice President
Richard M. Nixon faced Democratic
candidate John F. Kennedy.
• Kennedy joined the United States Navy
during World War II and was assigned to
active duty in the Pacific.
Election of 1960
Kennedy and the New Frontier (cont.)
• Kennedy’s political career began in 1946
when he won a seat in Congress from
Massachusetts.
– Six years later, he was elected to the
United States Senate.
Election of 1960
Kennedy and the New Frontier (cont.)
• The turning point in the 1960 election came
when the candidates took part in the first
televised presidential debates, during which
Nixon looked tired and sick while Kennedy
appeared handsome and youthful.
• On January 20, 1961, Kennedy was sworn in
as the 35th president of the United States.
Election of 1960
Kennedy and the New Frontier (cont.)
• Kennedy called for a New Frontier of social
reforms.
– He backed federal aid for education and
the poor.
– Kennedy also supported civil rights.
Election of 1960
Kennedy and the New Frontier (cont.)
• On November 22, 1963, Kennedy was shot
and killed as the presidential motorcade
rode through the streets of Dallas.
– Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson
became president.
Election of 1960
What was the name for John F.
Kennedy’s social reform plan?
A. New Deal
B. New Frontier
0%
D
A
0%
A
B
C
0%
D
C
D. Civil Rights Movement
B
C. Great Society
A.
B.
C.
0%
D.
The Great Society
The Johnson administration
expanded Kennedy’s domestic
plans with far-reaching programs in
many areas.
The Great Society (cont.)
• President Lyndon B. Johnson outlined a set
of programs known as the “Great Society.”
• In 1964 President Johnson declared a plan
called the War on Poverty, which consisted
of programs to help people who lived below
the poverty line.
• The Job Corps trained young people
seeking work.
The Great Society (cont.)
• Among the most important laws passed
under Johnson were Medicare—which
established a health insurance program for
all elderly people—and Medicaid—which
provided health and medical assistance to
low-income families.
• With Johnson’s backing, Congress passed
the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which banned
discrimination by race, gender, religion, and
national origin in employment, voting, and
public places.
How did Johnson expand on Kennedy’s
plans to help people with low incomes?
A. By establishing Medicare
B. By setting up Model Cities
0%
D
C
B
D. By pushing through the
Civil Rights Act
A
C. By introducing the
Job Corps
A. A
B. B
C. C
0%
0%
0%
D. D
What areas of civil rights did groups
try to improve in the 1960s, and what
methods did those groups use?
Reading Guide
Content Vocabulary
• sit-in
• interstate
Academic Vocabulary
• register
• emerge
Reading Guide (cont.)
Key People and Events
• Ella Baker
• Robert Kennedy
• James Meredith
• George Wallace
• Medgar Evers
• Voting Rights Act of 1965
• Malcolm X
Rate your agreement with the following
statement: Racial discrimination still exists
in the United States.
A. Strongly agree
0%
D
0%
A
D. Strongly disagree
A
B
C
0%
D
C
C. Somewhat disagree
A.
B.
C.
0%
D.
B
B. Somewhat agree
The Movement Grows
New leaders and groups emerged
as the civil rights movement took on
new causes.
The Movement Grows (cont.)
• African Americans fought discrimination and
racism in the North as well as in the South.
• High school and college students staged sitins throughout the nation against stores that
practiced segregation.
• Civil rights activist Ella Baker—one of the
organizers of the Student Nonviolent
Coordinating Committee—was a key player
in the civil rights cause.
The Movement Grows (cont.)
• Members of the Congress of Racial Equality,
known as Freedom Riders, took a bus trip
from Washington, D.C., to New Orleans to
see if the ruling against segregated bus
facilities was being enforced.
• The trip went smoothly until it reached
Alabama, where angry whites stoned and
beat the Freedom Riders.
The Movement Grows (cont.)
• The president’s brother, Robert Kennedy,
the United States attorney general, asked
CORE to temporarily stop the Freedom
Rides.
• The Freedom Riders met more violence in
Birmingham and Montgomery, Alabama, and
were arrested in Jackson, Mississippi.
The Movement Grows (cont.)
• In the fall of 1961, the Interstate Commerce
Commission issued new regulations that
banned segregation on interstate buses
and in bus stations.
• In 1962, violence erupted when African
American student James Meredith enrolled
in the University of Mississippi.
– Two people were killed, and federal troops
remained at the university to protect him
until he graduated in 1963.
The Movement Grows (cont.)
• In 1963, Alabama governor George Wallace
vowed to block the integration of the University
of Alabama, but backed down when President
Kennedy sent troops from the Alabama
National Guard.
• In the spring of 1963, Dr. Martin Luther King,
Jr., and the SCLC targeted Birmingham,
Alabama, for a desegregation protest.
The Struggle for Civil Rights, 1954–1965
The Movement Grows (cont.)
• On June 11, 1963, Medgar Evers, the state
field secretary for the NAACP, was murdered.
• Days later, the president introduced new
legislation giving all Americans the right to be
served in public places and barring
discrimination in employment.
The Struggle for Civil Rights, 1954–1965
The Movement Grows (cont.)
– To rally support for the civil rights bill, Dr.
King and the SCLC organized a massive
march on Washington, D.C., on August 28,
1963.
– Congress did not pass Kennedy’s civil
rights bill until after his death.
The Struggle for Civil Rights, 1954–1965
The Movement Grows (cont.)
• During the “Freedom Summer” of 1964,
thousands of civil rights workers spread
throughout the South to help African
Americans register to vote.
• In August 1965, Johnson signed the Voting
Rights Act of 1965—which gave the federal
government the power to force local officials
to allow African Americans to
register to vote—into law.
The Struggle for Civil Rights, 1954–1965
What cause did civil rights workers take on
during the Freedom Summer in 1964?
A. Voter registration in
the South
B. Enforcement of bus
desegregation
D
C
B
A
A. A
B. B
C. Integration of Southern
0%
0%
0%
0%
C. C
universities
D. housing
D
D. Discrimination in employment and
Other Voices
Some African American leaders
differed with Dr. King’s strategy of
nonviolent protest.
Other Voices (cont.)
• Malcolm X, born Malcolm Little in Omaha,
Nebraska, emerged as an important new
voice for some African Americans.
– He criticized the civil rights goal of
integration, declaring that the best way for
African Americans to achieve justice was
to separate themselves from whites.
Other Voices (cont.)
• Stokely Carmichael advanced the idea of
Black Power—a philosophy of racial pride
that said African Americans should create
their own culture and political institutions.
• The first major urban riots since the 1940s
took place in the summer of 1965 in the
Watts section of Los Angeles.
– The Watts riot was the first of a series of
racial disorders that hit several cities in the
summers of 1965, 1966, and 1967.
Other Voices (cont.)
• On April 4, 1968, an assassin shot and killed
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., setting off riots in
more than 100 cities.
Which of the following people was
opposed to integration?
A. John F. Kennedy
B. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
0%
D
A
0%
C
D. Stokely Carmichael
B
C. Medgar Evers
A. A
B. B
C. C
0%
0%
D. D
How did the civil rights movement
affect minorities other than African
Americans?
Reading Guide
Content Vocabulary
• feminist
• Latino
Academic Vocabulary
• aspect
• diverse
Reading Guide (cont.)
Key People and Events
• National Organization for Women
• Equal Rights Amendment
• Sandra Day O’Connor
• César Chávez
• American Indian Movement
Rate your agreement with the following
statement: Women in America have equal
rights with men.
A. Strongly agree
0%
D
0%
A
D. Strongly disagree
A
B
C
0%
D
C
C. Somewhat disagree
A.
B.
C.
0%
D.
B
B. Somewhat agree
Women’s Rights
The influence of the civil rights
movement led many American
women to organize and push for
greater rights and opportunities.
Women’s Rights (cont.)
• In 1963 Congress passed the Equal Pay Act,
which prohibited employers from paying
women less than men for the same work.
• In 1966 feminists created the National
Organization for Women (NOW) to fight for
equal rights for women in all aspects of
life—jobs, education, and marriage.
Women’s Pay
Women’s Rights (cont.)
• In the early 1970s, NOW began a campaign
for an Equal Rights Amendment to the
Constitution; however, not enough states
ratified the amendment to make it law.
• In 1981 President Ronald Reagan appointed
Sandra Day O’Connor as the first female
justice of the U.S. Supreme Court.
Women’s Pay
Which president appointed the first female
justice of the U.S. Supreme Court?
A. John F. Kennedy
B. Lyndon Johnson
0%
D
A
0%
A
B
C
0%
D
C
D. Bill Clinton
A.
B.
C.
0%
D.
B
C. Ronald Reagan
Seeking Greater Opportunity
In the 1960s and 1970s, Hispanic
Americans, Native Americans, and
disabled Americans entered the
struggle for equality.
Seeking Greater Opportunity (cont.)
• In the 1960s, the Latino (often called
Hispanic) population sought equal rights.
– Although they share the heritage of the
Spanish culture and language, Latinos are
a diverse group with different histories.
Seeking Greater Opportunity (cont.)
• In the early 1960s, César Chávez organized
thousands of farmworkers into the United
Farm Workers, which won higher wages and
shorter working hours for many farmworkers.
• Latinos formed La Raza Unida to fight
discrimination and to elect Latinos to
government posts.
• As with African Americans, many Puerto
Rican immigrants have faced discrimination
in the job market.
Seeking Greater Opportunity (cont.)
• Cuban immigrants have settled all over the
United States, but the largest number settled
in southern Florida, where they have
established a thriving community.
Seeking Greater Opportunity (cont.)
• Congress passed the Indian Civil Rights Act
of 1968, which protected the constitutional
rights of all Native Americans.
– Supreme Court decisions in the 1970s
reaffirmed the independence of tribal
governments and also confirmed Native
Americans’ rights to land granted in
treaties.
Seeking Greater Opportunity (cont.)
• In 1968 a group of Native Americans set up
the American Indian Movement, which
worked for equal rights and improved living
conditions.
• People with physical disabilities also sought
equal treatment in the 1960s and the 1970s.
– One law concerned the removal of barriers
that prevented some people from gaining
access to public facilities.
Seeking Greater Opportunity (cont.)
– Another required employers to offer more
opportunities for disabled people in the
workplace.
– The Education for All Handicapped
Children Act asserted the right of children
with disabilities to equal educational
opportunity.
Why was La Raza Unida formed?
A. To organize farmworkers
B. To demand equal pay for
equal work
0%
D
C
B
D. To extend voting rights to
Spanish speakers
A. A
B. B
0% C.
0% C0%
D. D
A
C. To elect Latinos to
government office
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segregation
the separation or isolation of a race,
class, or group
integrate
to end separation of different races
and bring them into equal
membership in society
boycott
to refuse to use in order to show
disapproval or force acceptance of
one’s terms
civil disobedience
refusal to obey laws that are
considered unjust as a nonviolent
way to press for changes
discriminate
to treat unfairly
civil
relating to citizens as individuals
poverty line
a level of personal or family income,
below which one is classified as poor
according to government standards
Medicare
a social program that helps pay for
medical care for the elderly
Medicaid
a social program that gives states
money to help those who cannot
afford to pay for their hospital bills
assign
appoint
consist
make up of
sit-in
the act of occupying seats or sitting
down on the floor of an establishment
as a form of organized protest
interstate
across state lines; connecting or
existing between two or more states
register
to enroll
emerge
to rise up
feminist
a person who advocates or is active
in promoting women’s rights
Latino
American who has come to the
United States from or is descended
from people who came from Latin
America or Spain
aspect
category, feature, or part
diverse
differing from one another
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