Civil Rights Movement In The 1950's And 1960

687 Words3 Pages

The civil rights movement spearheaded the advancement of African American society and could have not as effective without support from the government. As history shows, the beginning of the end of slavery, did have the support of many politicians, such as President Andrew Johnson, who attempts to keep whites supremacy. However later politicians helped the movement make many significant advances during the 1950’s and 1960, which included the Freedom Riders and the Brown v. Board of Education case. The Freedom riders legacy originated when the CORE’s James Farmer and Bayard Rustin attempted to ride interstate buses and trains in the Upper South in 1947. Their initial mission was met by white southerners who went to great links to ensure …show more content…

Board of Education case in 1954. The Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka case was based on the refusal of a white summer school programs, to admit Linda Brown a black student to attend their reasonably close school in 1950. (Hine 576) During the years between the filing of the case and of the trail Brown received assistance from Louis Redding, James Nabrit, Robert Ming, Kenneth Clark and John Hope Franklin, who helped argue his case before the U.S. Supreme Court. (Hine 575) Of note there were many other cases of Educational inequality simultaneously to Brown v. Board of Education, which has set the precedence for the Supreme Court’s unanimously ruling, which declared racial segregation in schools violated the Fourteenth Amendment. Just one year after the initial ruling made by the Supreme Court, they issued Brown II, which addressed the issue of practical process for the desegregation of the educational system. (Hine 577) After the Supreme Court decisions, based on Brown cases, the nation educational enterprise make vast advances in opening the door for all students, regardless of race. The decision and active federal enforcement of civil rights laws, continued to have a lasting effect until the