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Segregation In The 1950's

Decent Essays

The 1950’s through to the 1960’s was known as the era throughout history as the time of equality, but at the same time unjust and disproportionate. During the time of segregation there was only two options; if you’re white, you go to a white financially flourishing school; if you are black you go to a lower impoverished school. This led into an uproar between the congress and all the people with power within the supreme court. “The decision overturned the 1896 Supreme Court case Plessy v. Ferguson, in which the court ruled that segregation laws were constitutional if equal facilities were provided to whites and blacks. Segregation was therefore justified under the doctrine “separate but equal,” but in few cases were segregated facilities actually …show more content…

They were a group that went far and wide to rid the “negroes;” The KKK was filled with rich white supremacists that hated African Americans. The KKK was founded in 1915 and made an appearance when African Americans were gaining pieces and glimpses of freedom. “The growing black population in the North also led to conflicts with whites that included rioting in several cities between 1917 and 1919. In the summer of 1918, racial conflicts in Chester and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, led to ten deaths and sixty injured. That was only a prelude to 1919, when twenty-five race riots erupted across the United States, leaving about one hundred people dead. During these years, membership in the Ku Klux Klan (KKK), a white supremacist hate group, also grew rapidly and continued following the war. The KKK was founded only a few years earlier in 1915 in the Southern state of Georgia. It continued to grow in the 1920s to a membership of four million. Klansmen dressed in white robes for secrecy and to create fear. A burning cross was its symbol of terror. In the 1930s the KKK greatly declined in popularity only to come back in the 1960s in some Southern states in reaction to the fight for civil rights protections for blacks.,” Stated by the Modern world reference library -Government. This was evident that groups were instilling fear into the brains of African Americans and showing just how unjust things used to …show more content…

“Many of those who were active in the Civil Rights Movement, with organizations such as NAACP, SNCC, CORE and SCLC, prefer the term "Southern Freedom Movement" because the struggle was about far more than just civil rights under law; it was also about fundamental issues of freedom, respect, dignity, and economic and social equality.,” stated by Bentley. This was the movement in pushing alongside all African Americans and helping them gain their place in our society just like they are now. It took many protests and hardships to get to the point we are now. But due to all their diligence and the support all those groups gave to the African Americans; they are now

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