Have you ever seen a white person just smirk when they see an African American? To this day there are still some people who think humans that have a different skin tone are not equal to those who are white. Back in the 1950’s America was filled with segregation, having separate bathrooms just for those whose skin was not white, including schools, and even busses. We have come a long way and thankfully most people treat the colored the same as they would anyone else, like a human being. With the help from the NAACP, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Rosa Parks, America has become a much more peaceful and equal nation. In the 1950’s the NAACP was fighting for black rights, it was led by Thurgood Marshall. He and those advocating knew that the way blacks were being treated needed to be changed, so the only way they thought this could happen was by bringing their problems to the court. The most talked about case was the Brown. V Board of Education. It was a case about the segregations on public schools. This then led to the Little Rock 9, nine African American students were selected to …show more content…
is a huge political figure in the United States of America. He is most famous for his “I Have a Dream” speech. He stood up for civil rights and said how he had a dream that every person would be equal, no one man would be better than another. He advocated for social change, he did this by emphasizing the importance of nonviolent acts and being a major leader when it came to the civil rights activities. He stood up for those African Americans whose voice was not heard. From 1955 - 1964 he did his best to abolish racial discrimination, especially in public places. He didn’t want white and black to have to go to separate schools or use separate bathrooms, he knew that behind all of the physical features, we are all the same. Some couldn’t grasp the fact that this was true, which then led up to hate towards him, which resulted in his assassination in Memphis,