The Civil Rights Movement: Segregation In The United States

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The fifties were a beginning point for a change in history that no one saw coming. Even when African Americans had gained basic civil rights after the Civil War. For a very long time segregation still remained the same despite the 14th and 15th Amendment. For many African Americans coming back from World War II they believed that changes would have been made after risking their lives for their country. Luckily in that era they had powerful and influential people to help get justice for people of colored where they no longer had to feel different and separated. To begin with, on December 1, 1955 a historic event took place. A strong African American woman named Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat to a white man on the bus. She was immediately …show more content…
Ferguson case (Prof. Martinez). An innocent man was punished only for refusing to be in a Jim Crow car. Segregation and racism continued until a courageous change in history happened in 1954. Regardless of of the courts ruling separate but equal policy many did not follow this when it came to schools. Most of the black schools were neglected and uncared for. Republican Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl Warren spoke out for the injustice of public schools. That is when he ordered the states to create public school systems free of racial discrimination (Prof. Martinez). Three years later is when it finally came to light when the Little Rock Nine attended Little Rock Central High School. The courage it took for all nine of those students to have to endure all the racial comments, threats, and being mistreated for weeks on …show more content…
Regardless of how white people felt the Supreme Court help start equality for both African Americans and whites. Even though at first the separate and equal did not necessarily meant equal with the years to come they did come to light and see that separate but equal only caused things to still be unequal. After the Jim Crow Laws came about it segregated Africans Americans with things that they did on a day to day basis. Many of them migrated toward the North to try and escape some of the brutalities they have had to deal with, with the Jim Crow