Freedom Riders Essay

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    used to go about finding sources on the freedom riders was a simple Google search. The source I chose from the Internet was a page from history.com. While this article was published in 2010, it tells the stories of the violence that occurred in many places. This source tells how the original group of seven African Americans and six whites became known as the Freedom Riders, who would protest segregation throughout the South. Even though the Freedom Riders were brutally beaten they did not…

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    Freedom Riders bus ride protests were inspired in 1947 by Bayard Rustin and George Houser and was sponsored by the Fellowship of Reconciliation. Like the Freedom Rides of 1961, the road to Reconciliation was intended to test the Supreme Court ruling that banned black people from interstate travel; better known as the ruling of Boynton v Virginia. This protest was to protest for racial segregation against the laws of interstate travel. Rustin, along with three other men were arrested and…

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    When looking into the history of the Civil Rights some people might contradict whether the “Freedom Riders” were a success or failure. During the time of 1960, the Freedom Riders had a total of 13 freedom riders six African Americans and seven whites, which later on expanded. The Freedom Riders trip started on May 4, 1961, and continued for months with complications and successes in between, it ended in the fall of 1961. The occurrence of violence, angry, mobs, brutality, incarceration, and even…

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    The freedom riders were “A group of northern idealists active in the civil rights movement.” (“Freedom Riders” 1) “The Freedom Riders, who included both blacks and whites, rode buses into the South in the early 1960s in order to challenge racial segregation. Freedom Riders were regularly attacked by mobs of angry whites and received often belated protection from federal officers.” (“Freedom Riders” 1) Due to the freedom riders efforts, supporters of segregation inflicted viscous violence against…

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    protests against racial segregation. He was arrested during these demonstrations and his mom was very upset with him for it. Even though his mother was upset he was determined on the Civil Rights and went to participate in the Freedom Riders in 1961. The Freedom Riders challenged racially segregated facilities they encountered at interstate bus terminals in the South. It was very dangerous work that they were doing especially because they were in the South where it is illegal for a African…

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    who stood up for their rights as a legal citizen in America. He and all the others just wanted fair, equal lives like everyone else. Racism has been going on for a very long time, and it still is happening today. In the source, “Leaders of the Freedom Riders,” an interview between Bernard Keith Jarvis and civil rights advocate James Farmer, the two discuss how Farmer had dealt with racism in his whole life, and how he would try many things to make a difference. In another source, “Civil Rights…

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    Glued to a breaking story about seven African American men and six white activists now known as Freedom Riders, on May 4, 1961, the Freedom Riders left Washington, DC, and traveled through the extremely segregated Deep South on a mission to test Boynton Virginia. Jessie followed the story as it unfolded on national television and in the newspapers. The reports were that on May 14, the Freedom Riders in two segregated groups were attacked outside Birmingham, Alabama and Anniston, Alabama. The…

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    Freedom Riders: Perspective of Margret Oswalt At just nineteen years old Margret Oswalt moved to Jackson Mississippi with a business degree. She got her first job working in an insurance business called Kemper Insurance Company. The company was right across the street of Trail Way Bus Station, where the freedom rider buses came through. The day the freedom riders came into Jackson, Mrs. Oswalt and her co-workers opened their window and were shocked at what they saw. The streets were crowded,…

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    race and people perceived them as worthless, dirty, and the thought they needed to be worked to death and suffer. Slavery went on for so long but even when it ended, African-Americans still struggled to be viewed as real citizens. In the film Freedom Riders by Stanley Nelson…

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    4, 1961, a group of six whites and seven African Americans departed from Washington D.C. to begin their fight for Civil Rights. Their goal was to end segregation in bus terminals and in all transportation stations. These people were called the Freedom Riders. They fought to prove that “separate but equal” was not truly equal. They wanted to end the Jim Crow laws, and this was just one of the many ways they fought. In 1986, the Plessy v. Ferguson Supreme Court case enacted the “separate but…

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