- May 10, 2011
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Yes it was a very organized movements with protests, sit-ins, and bus riding all over the southern states but mostly Alabama and Mississippi where it was the worst. There were many murders, missing persons reports, burnings of houses and churches. One very famous bombing of a church where four very young girls were killed during Sunday school. http://www.history.com/topics/black-history/birmingham-church-bombingThanks for the info...let me get this straight, some black people got murdered? For sitting in the white section of the bus?
I had heard that in south africa, where there was apartheid the same sort of thing happened. But i dont know if they had someone like Rosa Parks, it was Nelson Mandela who was put in jail...
Churches were where most of the meetings for the organization took place. In some cities the groups would have a name some they didn't depending on if they had a newspaper they were publishing or some other way they were already known in the community.
Dr Martin Luther King Jr. was at the head of the whole thing. He had his close advisers and all the church and city and county groups had their local leaders. All the press would follow Dr King and he would travel to a city where he had a big group or a few groups together. He would call them ahead of time and say we are going to protest or march or do a sit-it on this day and they would be ready and the press would cover it.
Sometimes the local police would set dogs on them,blast them with fire hoses, and beat them, and these were just kids sometimes 13-16 years old in some cases. They would fill up the jails every time they protested. This is when people started coming from the north because of what they saw on TV (the dogs and such). They were met in the south with even more hostility for being Yankees trying to tell them how to run their towns.
I could go on and on about Dr Martin Luther King Jr. President John F Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson, the March on Washington, The Civil Rights Act, Bobby Kennedy, all the assassinations, Medger Evers, the Mississippi Three, Emmit Till, if you Google civil rights struggle you can find a million things I missed.
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