Objectives: 1. Explain how the activities of existing civil rights organizations laid the groundwork for the movement of the 1960s. 2. Describe the philosophy that Martin Luther King, Jr., brought to the movement. 3. Explain why some students formed their own civil rights organization. Main Idea: The civil rights movement of the 1960s consisted of many separate groups, whose leaders and methods differed while sharing the same goal of securing equal rights for all Americans. • The Civil Rights movement was a grassroots movement led by ordinary citizens trying to end racial injustice. • In 1910, W.E.B. DuBois and Jane Addams created the NAACP. It was an interracial group whose goals were to fight segregation through the court system and equality for everyone. • The NAACP did not seem to help the economic problems of African Americans, so other groups were created like the National Urban League. • CORE was created during World War II and will hold demonstrations in cities opposing segregation. CORE will struggle to survive but it will rebound into a national organization in the 1950s. • In 1957 the SCLC was founded by Martin Luther King, Jr. and other African American clergymen. The group quickly rose from 60 to 100 clergymen and elected King, Jr. as their president. King, Jr. will use this position to become the national civil rights leader. • The SCLC moved the focus of the civil rights movement from the North to the South. The group also suggested nonviolence as a symbol of strength, demonstrated by Jesus. King, Jr. learned his nonviolent approach from Mohandas Gandhi who used this approach to gain independence for India from Great Britain. Gandhi believed that you could not defeat a stronger foe with violence. • The SNCC will split from the SCLC in 1960. Ella Baker will organize the meeting to discuss splitting from the SCLC. Baker will encourage forget fear and doubt and join the fight to the bitter end. • The group consisted of younger African Americans. The group shifted tactics away from the church. The SNCC was more militant and tried to achieve more immediate change. The SNCC organized voter registration drives encouraging young African Americans to vote. • Robert Moses quickly became an early leader with his soft-spoken, low-key approach. People followed Moses because he seemed humble, ordinary, and accessible.
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