How Did The Naacp Influence The Civil Rights Movement

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From 1940 to 1970, peaceful tactics such as the NAACP lawsuits, Montgomery Bus Boycott, and the Birmingham Children’s Crusade were most effective in bringing about change during the Civil Rights movement. Starting in 1940’s, The NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People) utilized peaceful lawsuits in the courts as well as in local legislature to challenge racial discrimination in education to bring about change (Norton, 767). The peaceful manner utilized by the NAACP to influence the Civil Rights movement allowed the African American community to effectively garner admission to professional as well as graduate schools at formerly segregated schools. In 1954 the NAACP continued to influence the Civil Rights movement by …show more content…

The leader of the boycott, Martin Luther King Jr., utilized the teachings of Mohandas K. Gandhi to peacefully fight the segregation issue of public transportation. Through the implementation of a year-long boycott, the African America community was able to peacefully cripple the financial state of the bus company, prompting the Supreme Court to declare Alabama’s bus segregation laws unconstitutional. Following the success of the Montgomery Boycott, Martin Luther King rose to lead the Civil Rights movement and in 1963 he started non-violent protests in Birmingham, Alabama (Norton, 793). King expected their to be a violent outcry to their movement, so he put children on the front lines of his march in an effort to show the world the racial hate and violence that plagued the United States. The march was successful due to the nation being subjected to footage of the Birmingham police commissioner unleashing high-powered water hoses and attack dogs on the protesting crowd which included thousands of