Civil Rights Movement Argumentative Essay

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Slavery U.S(African Americans) Abraham Lincoln, Jim Crow Laws, Present day segregation, discrimination. Activists used multiple strategies for achieving civil rights which had both success and failures. Paragraph 1: (strategies) Speeches: Formal lecture given to an audience which is used to inspire others. Speeches were a very good strategy, because it helped give others a voice in what they were doing, Martin Luther King Jr did a very good job of doing this during the time of the Civil rights. Violent/ Non-Violent Protests: Statement or action in disapproval of something. There are many different groups such as the KKK, Black Panthers, NAACP, and FECP which are organizations that fought for what the believed in. Photojournalism: The art …show more content…

It was a huge protest in which many people gathered,( 250,000 people) this march aimed towards jobs and freedom, they wanted to draw the attention of others about how African Americans suffered inequalities a 100 years after the emancipation. This also led up to Martin Luther King Jr. speech “I have a dream”. Not everyone supported the March Malcolm X considered this a dramatic buffoonery in Washington but attended anyways. Right after the march Martin Luther King Jr. met with President Kennedy at the White House in which they talked about bipartisan support of the Civil Rights legislation and were passed not until JFK’s death. There are the Black Panthers which were a group that supported violence and political party that challenged police brutality. It was founded in 1966 by Huey Newton and Bobby Seale that had 2000 members at its most. This group soon declined in numbers once the FBI linked them towards criminal activity. The Editor of the Black Panthers newspaper, Eldridge Cleaver, also a 17 year, was involved in a shootout in 1968 that left Bobby Hutton dead and two officers injured. This strategy of protesting didn’t do anything but cause legal problems. Jacob Riis also fought not just for African Americans, but for the ones that lived in poverty. Jacob Riis immigrated to America in 1870, and as a police reporter for New York. On his ventures to cases he saw the conditions that people lived in on the lower East side of Manhattan. Jacob Riis decided to use photography to spread a message by visual aid to show people what they didn’t want to see. He even published a book How the other half lives and this is where things really started to change. After all of this New more parks for the public and playgrounds for the children, he really had a impact on New York in a positive

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