Civil Rights Movement in the United States - U.
Publié le 02/05/2013
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The Great Depression of the 1930s increased black protests against discrimination, especially in Northern cities.
Blacks protested the refusal of white-owned businessesin all-black neighborhoods to hire black salespersons.
Using the slogan “Don't Buy Where You Can't Work,” these campaigns persuaded blacks to boycott thosebusinesses and revealed a new militancy.
During the same years, blacks organized school boycotts in Northern cities to protest discriminatory treatment of blackchildren.
The black protest activities of the 1930s were encouraged by the expanding role of government in the economy and society.
During the administration of PresidentFranklin D.
Roosevelt the federal government created federal programs, such as Social Security, to assure the welfare of individual citizens.
Roosevelt himself was notan outspoken supporter of black rights, but his wife Eleanor became an open advocate for fairness to blacks, as did other leaders in the administration.
The RooseveltAdministration opened federal jobs to blacks and turned the federal judiciary away from its preoccupation with protecting the freedom of business corporations andtoward the protection of individual rights, especially those of the poor and minority groups.
Beginning with his appointment of Hugo Black to the U.S.
Supreme Court in1937, Roosevelt chose judges who favored black rights.
As early as 1938, the courts displayed a new attitude toward black rights; that year the Supreme Court ruledthat the state of Missouri was obligated to provide access to a public law school for blacks just as it provided for whites—a new emphasis on the equal part of the Plessy doctrine.
Blacks sensed that the national government might again be their ally, as it had been during the Civil War.
C World War II
When World War II began in Europe in 1939, blacks demanded better treatment than they had experienced in World War I.
Black newspaper editors insisted during1939 and 1940 that black support for this war effort would depend on fair treatment.
They demanded that black soldiers be trained in all military roles and that blackcivilians have equal opportunities to work in war industries at home.
In 1941 A.
Philip Randolph, head of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, a union whose members were mainly black railroad workers, planned a March onWashington to demand that the federal government require defense contractors to hire blacks on an equal basis with whites.
To forestall the march, President Rooseveltissued an executive order to that effect and created the federal Fair Employment Practices Committee (FEPC) to enforce it.
The FEPC did not prevent discrimination inwar industries, but it did provide a lesson to blacks about how the threat of protest could result in new federal commitments to civil rights.
During World War II, blacks composed about one-eighth of the U.S.
armed forces, which matched their presence in the general population.
Although adisproportionately high number of blacks were put in noncombat, support positions in the military, many did fight.
The Army Air Corps trained blacks as pilots in acontroversial segregated arrangement in Tuskegee, Alabama.
During the war, all the armed services moved toward equal treatment of blacks, though none flatlyrejected segregation.
In the early war years, hundreds of thousands of blacks left Southern farms for war jobs in Northern and Western cities.
In fact more blacks migrated to the North andthe West during World War II than had left during the previous war.
Although there was racial tension and conflict in their new homes, blacks were free of the worstracial oppression, and they enjoyed much larger incomes.
After the war blacks in the North and West used their economic and political influence to support civil rightsfor Southern blacks.
Blacks continued to work against discrimination during the war, challenging voting registrars in Southern courthouses and suing school boards for equal educationalprovisions.
The membership of the NAACP grew from 50,000 to about 500,000.
In 1944 the NAACP won a major victory in Smith v.
Allwright, which outlawed the white primary.
A new organization, the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), was founded in 1942 to challenge segregation in public accommodations in the North.
During the war, black newspapers campaigned for a Double V, victories over both fascism in Europe and racism at home.
The war experience gave about one millionblacks the opportunity to fight racism in Europe and Asia, a fact that black veterans would remember during the struggle against racism at home after the war.
Perhapsjust as important, almost ten times that many white Americans witnessed the patriotic service of black Americans.
Many of them would object to the continued denial ofcivil rights to the men and women beside whom they had fought.
After World War II the momentum for racial change continued.
Black soldiers returned home with determination to have full civil rights.
President Harry Truman orderedthe final desegregation of the armed forces in 1948.
He also committed to a domestic civil rights policy favoring voting rights and equal employment, but the U.S.Congress rejected his proposals.
D School Desegregation
In the postwar years, the NAACP's legal strategy for civil rights continued to succeed.
Led by Thurgood Marshall, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund challenged andoverturned many forms of discrimination, but their main thrust was equal educational opportunities.
For example, in Sweat v.
Painter (1950), the Supreme Court decided that the University of Texas had to integrate its law school.
Marshall and the Defense Fund worked with Southern plaintiffs to challenge the Plessy doctrine directly, arguing in effect that separate was inherently unequal.
The U.S.
Supreme Court heard arguments on five cases that challenged elementary- and secondary-school segregation, and in May 1954 issued its landmark ruling in Brown v.
Board of Education that stated that racially segregated education was unconstitutional.
White Southerners received the Brown decision first with shock and, in some instances, with expressions of goodwill.
By 1955, however, white opposition in the South had grown into massive resistance, a strategy to persuade all whites to resist compliance with the desegregation orders.
It was believed that if enough people refusedto cooperate with the federal court order, it could not be enforced.
Tactics included firing school employees who showed willingness to seek integration, closing publicschools rather than desegregating, and boycotting all public education that was integrated.
The White Citizens Council was formed and led opposition to schooldesegregation all over the South.
The Citizens Council called for economic coercion of blacks who favored integrated schools, such as firing them from jobs, and thecreation of private, all-white schools.
Virtually no schools in the South were desegregated in the first years after the Brown decision.
One county in Virginia did indeed close its public schools.
In Little Rock, Arkansas, in 1957, Governor Orval Faubus defied a federal court order to admit nine black students to Central High School, and President Dwight Eisenhower sentfederal troops to enforce desegregation.
The event was covered by the national media, and the fate of the Little Rock Nine, the students attempting to integrate theschool, dramatized the seriousness of the school desegregation issue to many Americans.
Although not all school desegregation was as dramatic as in Little Rock, thedesegregation process did proceed—gradually.
Frequently schools were desegregated only in theory, because racially segregated neighborhoods led to segregatedschools.
To overcome this problem, some school districts in the 1970s tried busing students to schools outside of their neighborhoods.
As desegregation progressed, the membership of the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) grew.
The KKK used violence or threats against anyone who was suspected of favoringdesegregation or black civil rights.
Klan terror, including intimidation and murder, was widespread in the South in the 1950s and 1960s, though Klan activities were notalways reported in the media.
One terrorist act that did receive national attention was the 1955 murder of Emmett Till, a 14-year-old black boy slain in Mississippi bywhites who believed he had flirted with a white woman.
The trial and acquittal of the men accused of Till's murder were covered in the national media, demonstratingthe continuing racial bigotry of Southern whites..
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