Selma to Montgomery‚ 1965 * In June 1963‚ Medgar Evers‚ the NAACP Mississippi field secretary‚ was shot and killed in front of his home. * In 1964‚ SNCC workers organized the Mississippi Summer Project to register African Americans to vote in the state‚ wanting to focus national attention on the state’s racism. * SNCC recruited Northern college students‚ teachers‚ artists‚ and clergy to work on the project. They believed the participation of these people would make the country concerned
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Christie Omar LSN‚ 3B Mr. Isebor 1-29-2015 SELMA Summary In Selma we look back at the 1965 campaign by Dr. Martin Luther King‚ Jr. to secure equal voting rights for African-American citizens. That political battle was waged in the deep south‚ where King organized marches from the town of Selma to Montgomery‚ Alabama‚ in protest of President Lyndon B. Johnson’s hesitation on voting rights legislation. Looking behind the curtain of history‚ we learn more about the political obstacles and negotiations
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but also because of what is stood for. Lewis and Williams prepared the march to honor the death of Jimmie Lee Jackson who was killed trying to protect his mother at a civil rights demonstration. It was intended to be a peaceful march from Selma to Montgomery to protest voting rights. As the marchers crossed the Edmund Pettus Bridge they were met by state troopers. When asked to stop the march they refused. The marchers were then attacked by dogs‚ beaten with billy clubs‚ and sprayed with tear gas
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Some have heard of the Selma March while others have not. Believe it or not‚ the Selma March is an important event in black history and one that is remembered every year. I found interest in this topic and that’s why I decided to write my paper on it. People such as African Americans fought for their rights even though it wasn’t easy and came with inhumane consequences. With a few resources‚ I have came upon information about who participated and led the marches‚ what the reactions were to the protesting
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Running head: March On Selma March On Selma Kenneth Rutherford II PHI 103 Professor Myers Abstract The issue at hand is the marching from Selma to Montgomery Alabama that President Truman regarded to as being silly‚ actually being one of the most powerful marches ever demonstrated in the civil rights movement. Although there was death involved the meaning behind the march‚ was in fact the greater cause. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was a man of non-violence and the most powerful part of
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Bloody Sunday‚ Selma was Forever Changed Author Lisa Marostica in her article‚ “Bloody Sunday‚ Women and the Collective” stresses the importance of memorializing the women‚ who dedicated their lives to the civil rights struggle. She does an adequate job in supporting her claim‚ by summarizing the lives of two incredible women‚ all the while illustrating the event that took place during the peak of the civil rights movement. “Bloody Sunday” on March 7‚ 1965‚ goes down in history as one of the most
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Prof. Traci Alexander Speech Communications Due Date: April 6th 2015 What could be more American? As I to listen to President Obama speech on the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma Alabama to mark the 50th Anniversary of “Blood Sunday”. I thought about the question asked What could be more American and If I Agreed with this statement. President Obama throughout his speech single out the most important idea that Americans
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of America‚ which were at that time‚ the African Americans‚ quite nobly took a stand and spoke out against all of the injustice they and their families have endured‚ and I can’t help to greatly admire them for that. Overall‚ the march from Selma to Montgomery was truly an inspiring turning point in history. After watching videos and reading articles about this major event‚ I was immediately met with anger‚ directed towards the past people of America who had so cruelly treated their not only fellow
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University Research Orientation "We Shall Overcome -- Selma-to-Montgomery March." U.S. National Park Service - Experience Your America. The Selma-to-Montgomery March for voting rights ended three weeks--and three events--that represented the political and emotional peak of the modern civil rights movement. On "Bloody Sunday‚" March 7‚ 1965‚ some 600 civil rights marchers headed east out of Selma on U.S. Route 80. They got only as far as the Edmund Pettus Bridge six blocks
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as an activist was during the Montgomery Bus Boycott. (1)The movement was started by Rosa Parks’s arrest after she refused to give up her seat to a white person on a crowded bus. (1) A committee‚ the Montgomery Improvement Association (MIA)‚ was formed by the African-American leaders in Montgomery and lead by Martin Luther King Jr.. (3) In retaliation of the arrest‚ the MIA coordinated a massive boycott
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