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How Did Fred Hampton Impact The Civil Rights Movement

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The Civil Rights Movement, taking place in the 1960s, was a social and political movement that worked to achieve equality for Black Americans. At the time, there was a lot of tension between races in America which led to violence. Fred Hampton, who was the chairman of the Black Panther Party, worked to help the Civil Rights Movement. Fred Hampton had the greatest impact on the history of his era because he was an activist, worked to expand the rights of black people, and was a leader in the black community. One of the reasons Fred Hampton had the greatest impact was because he was an activist during the Civil Rights Movement. Garrett Albert Duncan said, “ Among his family’s acquaintances was Emmett Till, a Black child whom Iberia had babysat. …show more content…

This incident made Fred Hampton knowledgeable of what the U.S. is really like. This caused him to start helping out the black community in different ways. Fred Hampton created treaties for the different gangs to come together because he thought that African Americans should not be fighting against each other because the enemy was the whites. Fred Hampton held many rallies for African Americans to motivate them to keep fighting for their rights. According to Ryan Taylor, Fred Hampton had powerful quotes like “We say you don’t fight racism with racism. We’re going to fight racism with solidarity. We say you don’t fight capitalism with no black capitalism. You fight capitalism with socialism.” and “We’re going to organize, dedicate ourselves to revolutionary political power and teach …show more content…

One way was being the head of the BBP(Williams). As the head of the BBP, he did great things for the black community by speaking out against the racial problems that happened in Chicago. Some of those problems included poverty, corruption, racism, police brutality, and substandard housing. By being the leader of the BBP he had different gang's respect. With the respect he gained, he got the different gangs to sign a peace treaty between them. But being the head of the black community came with FBI attention. Fred Hampton got onto the FBI’s radar. According to The Assassination of Fred Hampton, by Alicia Maynard, “The government feared Hampton's effectiveness toward the success of the Black Panthers’ political aims. Hampton had a magnetic personality and the unique ability to unite people from many different walks of life. There was fear that he would be an “African-American messiah who they [the government] believed would lead an African-American

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