Local Action Power Behind Major Civil Rights Movement Organizations
The Civil Rights Movement caught fire in home-grown communities, gained attention on the international stage, and produced the most enlightened change in United States history. The role of major organizations helped carry important messages worldwide, aided communities that needed assistance, and allowed for small town actions to become large scale movements. Young, passionate actors built the Black Civil Rights Movement on a local level with citizen action and local leaders, which developed into the largest national organizations fight towards equality. The resulting organizations spread the spectrum on progressive involvement, ranging from political lobbying to direct action, all influenced by international warfare, local protests, and passionate change.
College students and other youth of different races played a crucial role in the development, questions and success relating to the Civil Rights Movement. The young passionate individuals raised questions and concerns about the role of interracial organizing of the Civil Rights Movement. Lyndon B. Johnson supported interracial organizing amongst Civil Rights groups, and advocated the involvement of all races in order to unify the country under the movement. In his commencement speech at Howard University,
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The massive Civil Rights Movement organizations that were a result of local action and leadership brought attention to political progress and direct action taken against segregation and discrimination. Although the large organizations still get attention today and are credited with starting a revolution, the communities were the unsung heroes of the Movement. The Civil Rights Movement wasn’t executed by just one person, or one organization, it took a nation of support and