Civil rights movement
CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT
The history of the civil rights movement in the United States actually begins with the early efforts of the fledgling democracy.
1783 — Massachusetts outlaws slavery withinits borders.
1808 — Importation of slaves banned; illegal slave trade continues.
1831 — Nat Turner leads slave rebellion in Virginia; 57 whites killed; U.S. troops kill 100 slaves; Turnercaught, tried and hanged.
1833 — Oberlin College, first U.S. college to adopt co-education, is first to refuse to ban black students.
1850 — Compromise of 1850 admits California into the union withoutslavery, strengthens Fugitive Slave Laws, and ends slave trade in Washington, D.C.
1861 — Confederate States of America formed; Civil War begins.
1863 — President Lincoln issues EmancipationProclamation freeing « all slaves in areas still in rebellion. »
1865 — Civil War ends. 13th Amendment, abolishing slavery, added to the Constitution.
1866 — Ku Klux Klan formed in secrecy; disbands1869-71; resurgence in 1915.
1870 — 15th Amendment barring racial discrimination in voting added to Constitution.
1877 — Henry O. Flipper becomes first black graduate of U.S. Military Academyat West Point.
1896 — Supreme Court approves « separate but equal » segregation doctrine.
1906 — Race riots in Atlanta; 21 dead, city under martial law.
1909 — National Congress on the Negroconvenes, leading to founding of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
1923 — Oklahoma placed under martial law because of Ku Klux Klan activities.
1925 — Ku Klux Klanmarches on Washington.
1943 — War contractors barred from racial discrimination. Riots in Harlem, Detroit.
1948 — President Truman issues executive order outlawing segregation in U.S. military.1954 — U.S. Supreme Court declares school segregation unconstitutional in Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka ruling.
1955 — Rosa Parks refuses to move to the back of a Montgomery, Alabama, bus…