There was a court case called the Plessy V. Ferguson. This court case didn’t help Blacks at all because the Supreme Court ruled in favor of it. This made it racial discrimination become a big problem again in the South. President Roosevelt was elected into office while this was all happening, but he was too afraid to try and make big changes that supported African Americans because he was afraid that he would lose his southern white supporters. …show more content…
One of the big events was when Rosa Parks, a Black woman in Montgomery, Alabama, wouldn’t give up her seat on the bus for a white person. She was then arrested and Martin Luther King Jr. organized a bus boycott. This boycott went on for a while and eventually started to hurt the bus system and many whites did everything they could to stop the boycott. King and other leaders started to receive threats from angry whites. In the end this ended up helping African American though, because it the court ended up ruling that bus segregation was …show more content…
led many protests, but he did it while promoting non-violence. In some places everyone who was protesting would be arrested, but they soon realized that if they arrested everyone the jails would soon fill up. If the jails all filled up there would be no choice but to give in to them. One of the protests that King led was the March on Washington this is where he presented his I Have a Dream speech. After this march violence returned with a bombing and the assassination of president Kennedy. Johnson then took office and passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964. This act prevented discrimination in employment and public accommodations. As we can see it took a lot of time and violence to get the small results that were achieved. Many lives were taken because they stood up for what they felt was right and