1. Narration
This all started off with the end of the civil war in 1865 meant the end of slavery but that wasn’t the end of it. As of 1870 all eligible male citizens were allowed to vote but were discouraged through violence and legal stipulations. In 1896 the Supreme Court ruled to maintain racial segregation in private businesses in a case called Plessy vs Ferguson and was applied to schools and was sooner or later applied to all aspects of life which led to the application of Jim Crow laws which resulted as blacks being treated as second-class citizens. Their goal was the increase racial inequality and issues. And unfortunately, on the other side, it caused the Ku Klux Klan’s expansion was …show more content…
actually was an African American the lived during the nineteen fifties and nineteen sixties and was the main person involved with civil rights and racial discrimination, or so they thought. Martin Luther King Jr. set out to and to end racial discrimination and segregation in the United States. He did that by leading people through non-violent methods of having the equal social change in a big way. Based on his persuasiveness and his strength of character actually added along with his motivation to have fairness between all races allowed him to accomplish his definite goal in a pretty major way. He also didn’t give a single regard for the consequences that came with that which pretty much was the perfect package and gave him the support of kind of many people, which was very contrary to popular belief. Through is movements he attained himself the “Nobel Peace Prize” in the year of 1964 by the Time Magazine. He was particularly awarded for His “I have a Dream” speech which is his main Success among many things and was among the best speeches given in history and kind of is always quoted from which only strengthens its meaning in a big way. However, the driving for equal civil rights put a target on his head because even though he had a lot of followers there really was also a good amount of haters. The White race who feared social change and were “Conservative Segregationists.” Due to all the struggles, he endured “Time Magazine” also awarded him as a man of the year and they specifically awarded him for his enduring the 20 times he actually was arrested and particularly constant threats toward him and his family and most importantly his house being bombed in a sort of major way. Unfortunately the pretty good die young and so he was shot in his motel Balcony on the fourth of April in nineteen