Section 1 Identification and evaluation of sources
The focus of this investigation assesses to what extent did the civil rights movement make considerable progress between 1950 to 1968. This question has been investigated by how the civil rights movement is consisted of organized efforts aimed at overturning laws that discriminated against African American. In order to establish an accurate answer for this research question. The investigation required the gathering of all the information and statistical sources on the civil rights movement from 1950 to 1968, as well as all the information on the effects of civil right movements. Therefore, the civil rights movement timeline and how all the efforts at overturning laws provided by “Civil
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Such laws involved the unequal treatment of African Americans because of their race. The movement began in the 1950’s and continued through the 1960’s. The first major victories for civil rights in the Supreme Court well as the development of nonviolent protests. We all know Rosa Parks and how she needed to give her seat up on the bus when refusing to sit in the back. While the Civil rights movement has long passed many of its discrimination and racism within community still lives. From 1950 to 1964 through nonviolent protest the civil rights movement started to make noteworthy progress by broke the pattern of public facilities being segregated by race and achieved the equal rights for African Americans under the law of United States. The Civil War had officially abolished slavery, but it did not end discrimination against Black people they continued to endure the devastating effects of racism, especially in the …show more content…
Major laws included the Civil Rights Acts of 1957, 1964 this was an important piece of legislation that stopped segregation and discrimination in public accommodations, and 1968; and the Voting Rights Act of 1965, the most successful congressional civil rights legislation prohibited racial discrimination in the sale and rental of most of the housing in the nation and acquire the land of former owners, seek their own employment, and use public accommodations. The 24th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States in 1964, was another victory for the civil rights movement. The amendment banned poll taxes in federal elections. The amount of the tax is the same for a poor person as for a rich one. Southern laws in many states that had required the citizens to pay poll taxes in order to vote, this requirement had been used to keep and prevent poor African American from voting. The early 1960s brought the civil rights movement to its peak. The efforts of civil rights activists began to pay off when Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson finally addressed the inequality faced by Black people. Television coverage of the violence suffered by civil rights activists during protests across the