Martin Luther King Jr. Martin Luther King Jr. had one of the biggest impacts on the Civil Rights Movement. In April of 1963, he organized a protest in Birmingham. He did a protest in Birmingham because it's the most segregated and racist city in the country. That same protest Martin Luther King Jr. was arrested. After he got arrested he became even more popular from a speech he gave later that same year. Later into 1965, he led an on-going march in Selma, Alabama he did this because his goal was to get more African American voters. His impacts gave people hope that segregation would end soon but he needed everyone's help. John F. Kennedy Many African Americans had voted for John F. Kennedy to take office since he was working towards civil rights. He wanted to end segregation in education, he also wanted …show more content…
After she was convicted it sparked something else in the South. Everyone who wanted racial segregation to end was angry and this began a boycott that lasted a long time. Ever since refusing to give up her seat she became a symbol in the fight to end racial segregation. Malcolm X Malcolm X didn't just target racial segregation for blacks but he also wanted to protect the Black Muslim faith. He tried persuading people who supported him to stand up for themselves just like Rosa Parks had. Black nationalism and Islam had combined because Malcolm influenced people, he became one of the leaders. His books became popular, his book were based on his opinions of racial segregation. His impact was what he told people that made them so confident. George Wallace George Wallace was all for racial segregation he was even known as a symbol that opposed Civil Rights. His campaign revolved around making President Lyndon B. Johnson look bad for signing the Civil Rights Act of 1964, his goal was to make everyone who didn't oppose racial segregation to be on his side and vote for