1963 retrospective: the struggle for civil rights

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1963 retrospective: the struggle for civil rights"


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* Leaders of the March on Washington; Robert W. Kelley/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images 50 YEARS AGO _En Español_ | Let's go back to 1963. It was six years after federal troops ensured


the integration of Little Rock Central High School in Arkansas, yet many southern schools remained segregated. African American leaders were mobilizing protests not only about schools but


also for full access to public accommodations and for voter registration. President John F. Kennedy was weighing how far and how fast to lend support. Here's what happened. 1 of 23 *


Bettmann/Corbis FOREVER SEPARATE? - JAN. 14 Newly elected Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace pledges "segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever" in his inaugural


address. Endorsed by the NAACP in a previous failed run for governor, Wallace would win four times with more conservative platforms. 2 of 23 * Courtesy of Clemson University OPENING DOORS -


JAN. 28 Harvey Gantt, the first African American admitted to Clemson University, begins classes at the South Carolina school. He would graduate two years later with honors and a degree in


architecture and go on to serve two terms in the 1980s as the first black mayor of Charlotte, N.C. 3 of 23 * Bettmann/Corbis LESS THAN PERFECT - FEB. 28 Picketers calling for integration f


St. Louis public schools. President John F. Kennedy delivers a special message to Congress urging the passage of civil rights legislation that addresses voting and desegregation of schools


but does not address the important issue of integrating public facilities. 4 of 23 * Carl Iwasaki/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images WHAT'S THE WORD? - MARCH 26 A young volunteer


distributes flyers about the march. A. Philip Randolph, founder of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, sends a telegram to Martin Luther King Jr., president of the Southern Christian


Leadership Conference, to let him know that the Negro American Labor Council has begun planning a march in Washington "for Negro job rights." The event will become the March on


Washington for Jobs and Freedom in August. 5 of 23 * AP Photo A CAMPAIGN BEGINS - APRIL 3 African Americans in Birmingham, Ala., begin daily nonviolent demonstrations and sit-ins to protest


discrimination that continues at lunch counters and in public facilities despite U.S. Supreme Court rulings against segregation. Over the next three weeks, the demonstrations result in the


arrest of 400 protesters. 6 of 23 * Everett Collection UNDER ARREST - APRIL 12 On Good Friday, Birmingham police arrest Martin Luther King Jr. as he leads an antisegregation march. He's


charged with "parading without a permit." 7 of 23 * AP Photo/Richard Drew POWER OF THE PEN - APRIL 16 A handwritten copy of King's letter is shown. Martin Luther King Jr.


composes his "Letter From a Birmingham Jail," a response to a group of white clergymen who criticized him as an "outsider" inciting trouble. "Injustice anywhere is a


threat to justice everywhere," King writes. 8 of 23 * AP Photo/Bill Hudson ESCALATION - MAY 3 With many adult protesters in jail, organizers fill the ranks by training student


demonstrators. "Bull" Connor, Birmingham's commissioner of public safety, responds by unleashing fire hoses and attack dogs against marching children. A week later, the city


and protesters reach agreement on integration and better job opportunities for blacks. 9 of 23 * William Lovelace/Express/Hulton Archive/Getty Images BLOW TO JIM CROW - MAY 13 A federal


appeals court adds to the body of legal decisions against segregated public transportation and facilities. In this case, Freedom Riders — young activists testing enforcement of those rulings


in the South — had been arrested for ignoring "Whites Only" and "Colored Only" signs outside bus and train terminals in Jackson, Miss. The court rules the signs


unlawful. 10 of 23 * AFP/Getty Images OPEN ENROLLMENT - JUNE 11 Vivian Malone and James Hood enroll as the first African American students at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa. They


achieve the milestone after Gov. George Wallace, who has been blocking them at a university doorway, stands aside when President Kennedy mobilizes National Guard troops. It's nine years


after the U.S. Supreme Court held segregated public schools to be unconstitutional. 11 of 23 * Bettmann/Corbis FACE THE NATION - JUNE 11 After the confrontation in Alabama, President


Kennedy speaks from the Oval Office via television and radio to strengthen his position on civil rights: "I am, therefore, asking the Congress to enact legislation giving all Americans


the right to be served in facilities which are open to the public — hotels, restaurants, theaters, retail stores and similar establishments." 12 of 23 * CBS via Getty Images THE GOOD


DIE YOUNG - JUNE 12 Medgar Evers is interviewed by CBS Reports producer, William 'Bill' Peters. Hours after Kennedy's address, Evers, an NAACP official who had fought


segregation at the University of Mississippi, is gunned down outside his home in Jackson. He was 37. Evers' widow, Myrlie, keeps the case against Byron De La Beckwith alive until the


white supremacist is convicted of the murder in 1994. 13 of 23 * Bettmann/Corbis PROGRESS - JUNE 19 President Kennedy sends Congress a bill that guarantees blacks access to public


accommodations and gives the U.S. attorney general expanded powers to enforce court-ordered school desegregation. JFK and his brother, Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, are "sowing


the seeds of hate and violence," Mississippi Gov. Ross R. Barnett (in photo) later testifies before the Senate Commerce Committee. 14 of 23 * Leonard Freed/Magnum Photos STRENGTH IN


NUMBERS - JULY 18 Civil rights protesters demonstrate in Brooklyn, N.Y. A Gallup Poll asks Southerners: "Do you think the day will ever come in the South when whites and Negroes will be


going to the same schools, eating in the same restaurants, and generally sharing the same public accommodations?" Responses: 83 percent, "Yes"; 13 percent, "No";


the rest undecided. 15 of 23 * AP Photo FINISH LINE - AUG. 18 James Meredith, whose 1962 entry into the previously segregated University of Mississippi sparked a student riot, receives his


diploma at commencement ceremonies. Meredith is the first black man to earn a degree from Ole Miss. 16 of 23 * PhotoQuest/Getty Images MARCH ON - AUG. 28 Roughly a quarter of a million


people participate in the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom on the National Mall. The diversity of the crowd is consistent with that of performers and speakers, including singers


Marian Anderson, Odetta, Joan Baez and Bob Dylan, and American Jewish Congress president Rabbi Joachim Prinz. 17 of 23 * AFP/Getty Images 'I HAVE A DREAM' - AUG. 28 From the steps


of the Lincoln Memorial, Martin Luther King Jr. delivers his moving "I Have a Dream" speech to marchers. King calls the march "the greatest demonstration for freedom in the


history of our nation." 18 of 23 * Lynn Pelham/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images ONCE IS NOT ENOUGH - SEPT. 11 Black students head to Birmingham's all-white Graymont school.


President Kennedy again federalizes the Alabama National Guard, this time to force Gov. Wallace to accept integration of the state's primary and secondary public schools. 19 of 23 * AP


Photo CHURCH TRAGEDY - SEPT. 15 Ku Klux Klan members bomb the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala., a rallying point for civil rights activities. The blast kills four African


American girls attending Sunday school: Denise McNair, 11; and Cynthia Wesley, Carole Robertson and Addie Mae Collins, all 14. From 1977 to 2002, three men were convicted for their roles in


the crime. 20 of 23 * Danny Lyon/Magnum Photos VOTING RIGHTS - OCT. 7 During a voter registration campaign known as Freedom Day, police arrest activists for holding placards urging African


Americans to register at the county courthouse in Selma, Ala. The campaign mirrors efforts in Mississippi that help to lay the groundwork for the Freedom Summer, a massive 1964 voter


registration effort during which three young organizers were infamously murdered. 21 of 23 * AP Photo CALL FOR HELP - NOV. 27 Five days after the assassination of John F. Kennedy, President


Lyndon B. Johnson addresses a joint session of Congress and calls on lawmakers to pass a civil rights bill as a memorial to his slain predecessor. Congress will heed LBJ's call for


action the following year. 22 of 23 * Stan Wayman/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images CIVIL DISCOURSE - DEC. 3 Martin Luther King Jr. and President Johnson meet at the end of a year marked by


930 demonstrations and more than 20,000 arrests in at least 115 Southern cities, at least 35 racially motivated bombings and 10 deaths directly related to racial protest, according to the


Atlanta-based Southern Regional Council. 23 of 23


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