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Final Milestone Of The Civil Rights Movement

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The Final Milestone of the Civil Rights Movement In the 1960’s, Negroes weren’t given voting rights. They couldn’t vote for President, or Mayor, or Vice President. They couldn’t vote for anybody. They protested frequently in a peaceful way, but got no where. On March 7, 1965, Negroes began a march to protest their voting rights. They planned a 54 mile march between Selma and Montgomery, Alabama, and planned to do so in a peaceful and orderly mile. They reached the top of the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, and looked down to see a detachment of over 60 state troopers, several Dallas County sheriffs, and Dallas county officers on horses. The Negroes were then given two minutes to disperse, and were then attacked with billy clubs, tear gas, nausea gas, and smoke canisters. It quickly became known in American history as Bloody Sunday, and was a major act of injustice that later helped African Americans obtain equal rights. …show more content…

Bloody Sunday was a good example of racism, because white people wanted to be superior to Negroes. They made it impossible for Negroes to register to vote, making them inferior. They also called them “niggers”, which is racism because they said it just to harass them. During the attack in March, 1965, police called the Negroes these things while beating them down. They also called white people involved in the march “white niggers”. That’s racism towards white people because they treated them like it was a crime to support Negroes voting rights. Racism was one reason Bloody Sunday was a major act of

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