Early Civil Rights Struggles: Introduction


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After decades of silently enduring second-class citizenship, blacks in the late 1940s and early 1950s began to challenge the injustices they faced on a daily basis. The earliest school segregation cases demanded that the Supreme Court re-examine the "separate but equal" doctrine of Plessy v. Ferguson, and the murder of fourteen-year-old Emmett Till had a tremendous impact on blacks in both the North and the South. Although segregation in public facilities other than schools was rarely questioned during this time period, blacks were slowly gaining the resolve to finally stand up to Jim Crow.

  1. Integration in Universities
  2. Brown v. Board of Education
  3. The Murder of Emmett Till


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School integration and Brown sections adapted from School Integration in the United States, a web project written for my tenth grade African History class. Emmett Till section adapted from The Civil Rights Movement in America: 1955-1965, a web project written as my twelfth grade senior project.

Copyright © 1998 Lisa Cozzens (lisa@www.watson.org ). Please read this before you email me!
URL for this page: http://www.watson.org/~lisa/blackhistory/early-civilrights/index.html
Last modified: Mon Jun 29, 1998