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Essay On The Civil Rights Movement

887 Words4 Pages

The Civil Rights Movement
In The USA

For many years after the Civil War African-Americans didn’t really enjoy the freedoms that they were granted because they were always treated as second-class citizens. Black Americans lived in a completely different and dangerous world where they were constantly judged and humiliated for being black, whereas the white Americans of the time lived in another world where no one even bothered to lock the doors of their houses or worry about where their children went or what they did after school. Segregation (the separation of humans into racial groups in daily life) was applied to activities such as eating in a restaurant, drinking from a water fountain, using a public toilet, attending school, going to the movies and riding on a bus or train. Whites were always getting the better half of. However, according to Knockonwood 109 (https://ansers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20100619122008AA1pN1j)
The United States was declaring that its democracy was the best, most effective, way of running a country and was claiming that Communism was reducing human …show more content…

Many people believed that Rosa Parks who started the civil rights movement. She did indeed propel the Civil Rights Movement to unprecedented heights, but the Civil rights movement really began in 1954 with Brown vs. Board of Education of Topeka debate. Its goal was to challenge the Plessy v. Ferguson decision of 1896. The Plessy v. Ferguson decision segregated schools by race, giving white schools the best and the black schools as little as possible in not just education. The only reason why this was legal was because all-black schools and all-white schools had similar buildings, transportation, curricula, and teachers. The Plessy v. Ferguson was then overturned the 1896, allowing blacks to enter and attend all-white schools Thurgood Marshal to win the

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