|
The Martin Luther King's
impact on the Civil Right's movement
Martin Luther King Jr. had enormous
impact on the desegregation of the United States in the 1960's. He
had arguable the largest impact of any civil rights leader of his
time. King began his civil rights activities in 1955
when he protested Montgomery's segregated bus system. The protest
was started after an African American bus passenger by the name of
Rosa Parks was arrested after failing to give up her seat to a white
passenger. After the arrest African Americans encouraged others to
boycott the Montgomery bus system. They formed a secret group called
the Montgomery Improvement Association and elected King there
leader. The group chose to use the great weapon of protest to
desegregate the Montgomery bus lines. The groups protest worked and
soon the bus lines no longer had segregated rules and African
Americans no longer boycott the buses.
In the same year that the the bus
boycott was ended Kings house was bombed by angry whites intent on
killing King. They were unsuccessful and no one in the house was
hurt, and King was in no way swayed stopped from insisting on
nonviolent protests. In 1957 along with several other black
ministers King formed the Southern Christian Leadership Conference
to expand the nonviolent battle against discrimination. In 1957
segregation existed in every state in one way or another, but mostly
in the south, where Public Schools, transportation, hotels, and
restaurants were all segregated. In the year of 1960 King moved
himself and his family to Montgomery to devote more of his effort
towards the work of the SCLC.
the beginning of
the 60's was a time when segregation protests increased in
an amazing number. In 1960 Black college students across the country
began sitting at lunch counters and other public places where they
weren't allowed or where segregation was present. In 1963 King and
his associates at the SCLC launched a campaign against
discrimination using large gatherings to protest it. The gatherings
were interrupted by the Police who used dogs and fire hoses. The
violence was published on TV by the media and a cry out against
segregation was initiated in the United States. President Kennedy
proposed a bill to deal with this to congress.
Possibly the most well known civil
rights activity took place in August of 1963. King along with Civil
rights leaders from across the country organized a march in
Washington DC. The event was titled the March on Washington. It was
used to encourage congress to pass the bill that president Kennedy
had created. Many whites along with about 200,000 blacks gathered at
the base of the Lincoln memorial where Martin Luther King Jr.
presented his best known speech. Entitled I have a dream King's
speech defined the moral basis behind the civil rights movement. The
march one major victory in congress by 1964 when congress proceeded
to pass the civil rights bill that Kennedy had created, before his
death. The civil rights act of 1964 was created and it prohibited
racial discrimination in public places and called for equal
opportunity in employment and education for African Americans.
In 1965 congress passed another
bill the voting rights act of 1965. The voting rights act rid
states of all laws prohibiting African Americans from casting there
vote in all public elections. The bill was passed after King helped
organize a protest in Selma, Alabama. The protest was in response to
white officials trying to deny black citizens the right to vote in
several ways. Many hundreds of protesters attempted a march from
Selma to Montgomery, the state capitol. Police officers arrived as
the protest got underway with use of tear gas and clubs the police
officers made a bloody attack on the protesters. After the Selma
protest King continued to organize protest but not any on such a
grand scale. Up until the point of his death King continually fought
for the rights of African Americans in peaceful ways. Peaceful ways
sometimes interrupted by not so peaceful police officers.
|