Key events of the civil rights movement

Introduction

The civil rights movement was a mass protest movement whose work took place between 1954 and 1968 in the United States. The movement fought against racial segregation and discrimination and tried to obtain equal legal and civil rights for African Americans.

The civil rights movement included a vast number of organizations, social actions and strategies, most of which focused on using non-violent means to promote their goals. The main goal of the movement was to ensure that the 1954 ban on segregation was actually put in practice, and it used protests and demonstrations to fight for this goal.

A wide variety of events took place during this period, and we will describe some of the most important of these below. 

The Montgomery Bus Boycott

It is hard to place an exact starting date on the civil rights movement, but one of the first major protests was the Montgomery Bus Boycott. In 1955, a college-educated African-American woman named Rosa Parks refused to give her seat in the middle section of the bus to a white passenger, after the white seats were all occupied (African Americans were expected to give up seats in the middle section of the bus for white passengers). She was arrested for civil disobedience and soon became a national symbol of the movement.

Her arrest led to African Americans gathering and boycotting the buses to demand desegregation of the transport sector. For about a year, African Americans in Montgomery refused to take the bus, causing economic losses to the transportation sector.

The boycott was joined by Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. who soon became a prominent figure of the events. The local African-American leaders formed the Montgomery Improvement Association to organize the protests and chose King to lead them. During the boycott, King was arrested and his house was bombed.

At the same time, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) took Rosa Parks’ case to court, along with other similar cases. In one of the cases, Browder v. Gayle, the Supreme Court decided that bus segregation was unconstitutional.

The boycotts ended when the city banned segregation in buses, following the Court’s decision.

Sit-ins

Sit-ins were one of the main forms of protest between 1958 and 1960 and were generally organized by the NAACP Youth Council.

Sit-ins meant that African Americans would buy items from stores and then go to sit at the lunch counters of those st...

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