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1945-1962: Improving Civil Rights

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There are many different but significant events that occurred throughout 1945-1962 that had to do with improving civil rights for African American people. What I meant by significant event is an event that events that were sufficiently great or were important and created pathways for change to occur. Back in these time black African American were being treated as second class citizens and where seen as ‘separate but not equal’. However there were events that changed these views such as the Brown Vs Topeka Board of education, The Little rock high school case, the James Meredith Case and also the Montgomery bus boycott of 1955 that sprung into action after one several people began to stand up to the unequal laws that had been set.
One event that …show more content…
The brown case opened up the start of families bringing cases to the court. After the Browns case, the little rock’s school decided that they were going to allow 9 African-American students to enrol at the high school. However on 3rd September when the nine students led by Elizabeth Eckford tried to enrol, they were denied access into the school by Governor Orval Faubus who ordered State National Guardsmen to block the gates. On the 4th September 1957, the national guard were removed by a court order which enabled the 9 students to enter. When they got in, they were bombarded by a ferocious white crowd. By midday, the students had to be sent home because their safety could no longer be guaranteed. Press and TV coverage was pointed at USA at it caused great embarrassment for the nation that say and put themselves forward as the champion of freedom and equality. President Eisenhower decided that he was going to help the pupils and used the state national guard and the federal troop to protect the African American students for the entirety of the academic year. Orval Faubus, however, did not like this and decided that he would close all Arkansas schools the following year so that integration could not take place. All students no matter their race had no schooling until 1959 following a Supreme Court ruling. The little rock school case showed that states could be overruled by federal courts when the time was needed. The demonstration and the press coverage did not help America as they were seen as hypocrites as they went around saying that communist countries should allow everyone their basic human rights yet they as a nation were not. This event, even though led to a small breakthrough in that children were given the opportunity to get an education did not have much significance in taking the right steps forwards for the civil rights movement. The little rocks case actually set

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