The Origins of the Civil Rights Movement: Black Communities Organizing for ChangeAn account of the origins, development, and personalities of the Civil Rights movement from 1953-1963. |
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Page 131
... CORE made its first attempt to establish a base in the South . Because CORE was largely led by middle - class white intellectuals dur- ing the late 1950s , it entered the South with a paternalistic attitude about how poor blacks should ...
... CORE made its first attempt to establish a base in the South . Because CORE was largely led by middle - class white intellectuals dur- ing the late 1950s , it entered the South with a paternalistic attitude about how poor blacks should ...
Page 134
... CORE , because the " movement was heating up " and " CORE wanted to have a national image . " From then on McCain was linked with the organization that he “ had never heard about . " 48 After the Montgomery bus boycott CORE's Executive ...
... CORE , because the " movement was heating up " and " CORE wanted to have a national image . " From then on McCain was linked with the organization that he “ had never heard about . " 48 After the Montgomery bus boycott CORE's Executive ...
Page 135
... CORE not be a re- ligious organization . " 50 Farmer had reasoned that a secular social change organization could best serve his goal of creating a ... CORE's correspondence Organizational Relationships : The SCLC , the NAACP , and CORE 135.
... CORE not be a re- ligious organization . " 50 Farmer had reasoned that a secular social change organization could best serve his goal of creating a ... CORE's correspondence Organizational Relationships : The SCLC , the NAACP , and CORE 135.
Contents
Beginnings and Confrontations | 17 |
MIA ICC and ACMHR | 40 |
The Decentralized Political | 77 |
Copyright | |
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Abernathy ACMHR activists activities affiliates Alabama Albany Albany movement Baker Baptist Church Baton Rouge became began Birmingham black church black community buses Carolina charismatic Citizenship Schools civil rights movement Clark collective behavior Committee confrontation Connor CORE CORE's Court demonstrations desegregation developed direct action domination E. D. Nixon economic Ella Baker financed Fred Shuttlesworth ganizations groups Highlander Horton Ibid important indigenous interview jail James Bevel Jemison Kelly Miller Smith King's large numbers Lawson Martin Luther King mass meetings mass movement McCain ment MLK:BU mobilization modern civil rights Montgomery bus boycott movement centers movement halfway houses NAACP Nashville Negro nonviolent organizational participants political president Press racial Reverend role SCEF SCLC SCLC leaders SCLC's segregation Simpkins sit-in movement Smiley SNCC social movements South Southern blacks Southern white strategy struggle tactics Tallahassee tion UCMI vote white power structure workshops wrote York