freedom now section 17.2 young blacks protest jim crow via sit-in at a lunch counter

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Freedom Now Section 17.2 Young blacks protest Jim Crow via sit-in at a lunch counter

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Page 1: Freedom Now Section 17.2 Young blacks protest Jim Crow via sit-in at a lunch counter

Freedom Now

Section 17.2

Young blacks protest Jim Crow via sit-in at a lunch counter

Page 2: Freedom Now Section 17.2 Young blacks protest Jim Crow via sit-in at a lunch counter

Review• 1865- New Const.

Amendments• 1877- End of

Reconstruction• 1896- Plessy v

Ferguson• 1945/53- Truman

Administration• 1954- Brown v

Board of Ed.• 1957- Little Rock

Nine

White high school students demonstrate against integrated schools

Page 3: Freedom Now Section 17.2 Young blacks protest Jim Crow via sit-in at a lunch counter

Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) legalized segregation. If you were black, living in Montgomery

Alabama in 1955, you could be forced to give up seat on a bus for a white person.

Rosa Parks, after winning her point, sits in the front of the bus.

Page 4: Freedom Now Section 17.2 Young blacks protest Jim Crow via sit-in at a lunch counter

How might you change the injustice of segregation?

• Use violence• Retaliations likely• Doesn’t change people’s ‘heart’• Ignore the law• May get arrested• More dignified• Bring a lawsuit (Brown v Board of Education)• Legal victory • Did not really change things• Boycott• Refuse to ride the bus

– Hits them where it hurts ($)

Page 5: Freedom Now Section 17.2 Young blacks protest Jim Crow via sit-in at a lunch counter

Today we will identify how blacks, led by Martin Luther King, used their economic power

through boycotts and sit-ins, to fight the oppression of the White South.

Cartoon shows black man waving off a bus: “Uh, uh…I’m not going your way.”

Page 6: Freedom Now Section 17.2 Young blacks protest Jim Crow via sit-in at a lunch counter

Who was Rosa Parks?

• 43 year-old respected black woman who was the former local secretary for the NAACP in Montgomery, Alabama.

• Riding bus home from work one day during the busy Christmas season.

• Refused to give her seat up for a white man.

• She was arrested.

Above: another picture of Rosa sitting up front; below: Rosa Parks being fingerprinted after arrest

Page 7: Freedom Now Section 17.2 Young blacks protest Jim Crow via sit-in at a lunch counter

Why do you think Rosa’s arrest drew so much attention?

• Dignified, Soft Spoken, Likable

• A Woman

– Idea of a woman being forced to give up seat to a man seemed abhorrent

• Hard to find any fault with her

• Agreed to take case all the way (to Supreme Ct.)

Rosa and attorney walk up steps to court

Page 8: Freedom Now Section 17.2 Young blacks protest Jim Crow via sit-in at a lunch counter

How did Civil Rights Leaders react to Rosa’s arrest?

• Organized Montgomery Bus Boycott

– Refused to buy or use services

– Blacks made up 60% of bus riders

• Bus co. lost 40 thousand riders per day

• Dr. Martin Luther King (the Leader)

– “historians will have to pause and say there lived a great people-a black people who injected a new meaning and dignity into the veins of civilization.”

• Montgomery blacks used cabs, station wagons

• Wagons called ‘rolling churches’

• Insured by Lloyds of London

• Lasted nearly 400 days

• Supreme Court ruled bus segregation unconstitutional

Above: blacks pile into a cab; below: boarding bus after strike’s end

Page 9: Freedom Now Section 17.2 Young blacks protest Jim Crow via sit-in at a lunch counter

Parks Arrested

Capture: that colonial flag again…

Page 10: Freedom Now Section 17.2 Young blacks protest Jim Crow via sit-in at a lunch counter

Who were Dr. Martin Luther King and the SCLC?

• Young, charismatic, well-educated

• Held doctorate in theology

• Created the SCLC- Southern Christian Leadership Conference

– Organization of 60 ministers to direct the movement

• Held workshops on passive resistance

– How to protect oneself?

– Spat on, jeered

• MLK was influenced by:

– Thoreau- Civil Disobedience

– Gandhi

Above: King in front of SCLC building; below: King marches with other civil rights leaders

Page 11: Freedom Now Section 17.2 Young blacks protest Jim Crow via sit-in at a lunch counter

What are Sit-ins?• 4 freshmen in Greensboro, NC

sat at all-white lunch counter and refused to move until served

• Brought 27 students the next day• 300 by day 5• Sat in shifts• Sales dropped 33%• Finally served 6 months later• Started a “Grass Roots”

Movement.• 1960, 2,000 students sit-ins

– Read-ins, wade-ins (at beaches), kneel-ins (at churches)

Above: liquids poured on students at Greensboro lunch counter; below: one of the many copycat demonstrations

Page 12: Freedom Now Section 17.2 Young blacks protest Jim Crow via sit-in at a lunch counter

Describe the tactics of the SNCC:• Student Non-Violent Coordinating

Committee • Young whites and blacks who followed

King’s passive resistance ideology– Pronounced ‘Snick’

• “Jail, not bail”– SNCC members refused to have bail

posted• Why?

– Bail’s costly– Placed the cost of feeding, sheltering

protesters on the police and local officials

– Gave them moral high ground

Above: SNCC logo of a black and white hand shake; below: protestors allow themselves to be arrested

Page 13: Freedom Now Section 17.2 Young blacks protest Jim Crow via sit-in at a lunch counter

Urban scene, 1960s, from Peter Jennings documentary