The role of young people in the civil rights movement of the early and late 1960s

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Have you ever looked at a person and judged them for the color of their skin? If you have you should probably know the background of what they went through 50 years ago to try to gain equality. During the 1950s-1960s there was a civil rights movement that was a movement that ultimately changed the United States of America forever. When the people involved were fighting in a racial war for the equal rights for African Americans that ultimately ended all state racial segregations. This will tell you the large role that young children played in the civil rights movement for the following: The Freedom Rides, The Children’s March, and The Orangeburg Massacre. The Freedom Rides took place in the early May, 1961 where two groups of students riding in integrated Greyhound buses would stop at rest stops and blacks would go into white only bathrooms and whites would go into black only bathrooms. These bus rides were supposed to start at Washington DC and go on straight through the Deep South. These students were trying to protest interstate segregation laws and put an end to them. The trip went smoothly at first, but later everything went south as one bus got burned and the people inside were beaten. The second bus was stopped not to long after and everyone onboard was beaten and put in a hospital. Neither bus made it to their destination but it did put an immense amount of attention on them as a multitude of people followed in their footsteps and over a hundred buses became dragged into a freedom ride. (A Time for Justice )This shows how much these students were willing to take as in being beaten without fighting back and it also shows the amount of dedication involved. The Children’s March of April 16, 1963-May, 1963 took place in Birmi... ... middle of paper ... ...owed us through pain that this racism needed to end and it did. The civil rights movement showed the world what it was and how bad it was compared to today 50 years later where we all get along. And the Freedom rides, Children’s March, and Orangeburg massacre were just three examples of the many in the movement. The civil rights movement turned the United States from the land of the free and the home of the segregated into the land of the free and the home of the brave. Works Cited A Time for Justice. Dir. Charles Guggenheim. Teaching Tolerance, 1995. Film. Bass, Jack. “Documenting the Orangeburg Massacre.” Nieman Reports. Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard, Fall 2003. Accessed November 21, 2013 http://neiman.harvard.edu/reportsitem.aspx?id=100992 The Children’s March. Dir. Robert Hudson and Bobby Houston. Tell the Truth Pictures, 2005. Film.

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