Greensboro Sit-Ins Imagine America without equal rights. Where you were considered a less of a human just because of your race. This was how life was in the US during the 60’s. Because of this unfairness, African-Americans around the South started the civil rights movement. The Greensboro Sit-Ins, a part of the civil rights movement, helped to erase the segregation and discrimination in the South. They wanted to conduct a protest that would get them more rights. The Greensboro Sit-Ins, planned by four young black men, were a series of peaceful protests that were a result of segregation in the South that were influenced by peaceful protests conducted by Gandhi. They gave more rights to those who didn’t have very many.
Segregation
Racial segregation,
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The Greensboro Four stayed at the restaurant until closing time. Each day they came back with more and more people. The First Greensboro Sit-In took place at Woolworth’s. “The Greensboro sit-in was a civil rights protest that started in 1960, when young African-American students staged a sit-in at a segregated Woolworth’s lunch counter in Greensboro, North Carolina, and refused to leave after being denied service.” (“Greensboro Sit-In”) The Greensboro Sit-Ins gathered protesters and became more influential with every protest. It even gathered Martin Luther King Jr. and a group (SNCC) was created to fight for rights. The events in Greensboro left a big impact on the civil rights …show more content…
These protests gave African-Americans more rights in restaurants and eventually in other places as well. They grew so big that they held protests in 125 cities in nine states. Furthermore, the Sit-ins helped to achieve equal rights in America. “the sit-ins brought increasing attention to the civil rights movement.” And as a result of the sit-in movement, restaurants across the South were desegregated by the summer of 1960 (“Greensboro Sit-In”). Protests like these helped to fade segregation in the South and give all races equal rights. The Greensboro Sit-Ins helped to give rights and voices to those who didn’t have a voice. The Greensboro Four and all others involved fought for what they believed in and ended up changing