Civil Rights Movement In The 1950's

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The United States in the 1950s was quite different from the modern world we live in. There was a time where it was against the law for an African American to ride in the front of a bus or to be in the same school as a white child. Thankfully today our world is more accepting than that and we have the Civil Rights movement to thank for that. The Civil Rights Movement and its participants are responsible for shaping the country we now see today. The civil rights movement refers to all of the civil movements at the time between and specifically the period between 1954 and 1968. The primary goal of the civil rights movement was to end the racial segregation and discrimination against African Americans through the securing of legal recognition and as such they would be entitled to the same treatment as any other citizen under federal law. However, the civil rights movement also banned discrimination based on race, colour, religion, sex and country of origin. In the 1950s and 60s in the southern US …show more content…

The first approach was popular and was the nonviolent approach. This was the most common approach and was the approach used by Martin Luther King, Jr and the group known as COME which stands for Community On the Move for Equality. However not all people had the patience to wait for things to change so they took a second more violent approach. This involved threatening violence, acts of vandalism and occasionally actual violence. This second approach was usually more favoured by African Americans in high school to people in their late 20s. An example of such a group is the Invaders. The Invaders were organized in Memphis by Charles Cabbage and Coby Smith in 1967 as a part of a larger organization known as the BOP or Black Organization Project. These two different approaches were both employed in Memphis and although they shared a common interest the relationship between them was

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