The Civil Rights Movement and Bombingham

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One Bomb, Four Lives, Many Changes In the year 1963, many events took place in this year from blacks boycotting Boston buses to the assassination of JFK. However, that is not what is going to be elaborated on in this essay. It is going to be about the 16th Street Church bombing in Birmingham, Alabama (Simkin). There are a lot of things a reader may not know, unless that reader is a historian or has looked up this topic before. In 1963 a local black church was about to have their 11:00 a.m. service on Sunday, September 15 (Trueman). In the women’s room of the church are four African American girls, Denise McNair (11), Addie Mae Collins (14), Carole Robertson (14) and Cynthia Wesley (14), which were getting ready for the service while also talking about their first day of school (Simkin), until their whole world would be changed and they wouldn’t know it. The city of Birmingham was also known as “Bombingham” because all of the bombings that had gone on in the year 1963. The good thing was no one was hurt in the bombings. All of the targets that were hit were owned by African Americans. The bombers targeted black homes, black businesses, black churches and even black schools. All of these targets were supposed to cripple the will of the black people instead it just strengthened their movement. The main place that people would conduct their civil rights activities was the 16th street Baptist Church (Trueman). The 16th street Baptist Church was the largest black church in Birmingham, Alabama (Simkin). It hosted some of the most historic figures during all of the Civil Rights movement such as Thurgood Marshall, W.E.B. DuBois, and later Hillary Clinton would be there as well as junior senator from Illinois and future president Barack Ob... ... middle of paper ... ...l being brutally murdered was not right but it upped the spirits of many African Americans (Simkin). What has been described here has kept African Americans proud of where they came from and how they can overcome any problem that they are faced with. The phrase “Strength in numbers” comes to mind when reading what they had to endure especially the families of the four little girls that died in the devastating bombing of the 16th street church. They will always be remembered and missed dearly. Works Cited Simkin, John. Modern American Poetry. 1990. 23 April 2014 . Staff, Proquest. Proquest. 11 September 2013. 21 April 2014 . Trueman, Chris. History Learning Site. 2000-2013. 29 April 2014 .

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