Faces of the Movement
Actions & Protests
Legislation & Rulings
Post-WWII Society
Urban America & Politics
100

She helped spark the Montgomery Bus Boycott by refusing to give up her seat.

Rosa Parks

100

This boycott lasted 381 days and ended when the Supreme Court ruled bus segregation was unconstitutional.

Montgomery Bus Boycott

100

Laws that forced segregation in the South.

Jim Crow laws

100

The large increase in births from 1946 to 1964.

Baby Boom

100

This president sent federal marshals to enforce school integration.

John F. Kennedy

200

He believed in nonviolent protest to fight injustice.

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

200

Four college students began the first major one of these at a whites-only lunch counter in Greensboro.

Sit-ins

200

This Supreme Court case ruled that "separate but equal" in public schools was unconstitutional (Illegal).

Brown v. Board of Education

200

Many families moved here after WWII for more space and safety.

The suburbs

200

After JFK was assassinated, this president pushed Congress to pass the Civil Rights Act

Lyndon B. Johnson

300

He worked to integrate schools and register voters in Mississippi.

Medgar Evers

300

They rode buses to test whether southern states were obeying desegregation laws

Freedom Riders

300

This 1964 Act banned discrimination in jobs and public places.

Civil Rights Act of 1964

300

More Americans began moving to this region, including states in the South and West.

The Sunbelt

300

The political scandal that forced President Nixon to resign.

Watergate

400

She integrated an all-white elementary school at age 6.

Ruby Bridges

400

This civil rights leader encouraged getting into "good trouble" and led SNCC.

John Lewis

400

This law (1972) banned discrimination in school and education programs.

Title IX

400

This helped veterans afford college, home loans, and job training.

GI Bill

400

These acts set rules to reduce two major types of pollution

Clean Air Act and Clean Water Act

500

He believed in self-defense and Black pride instead of only nonviolence.

Malcolm X

500

The Selma march helped lead to the passage of this 1965 Act.

Voting Rights Act of 1965

500

This law requires public buildings to be accessible to people with disabilities.

Americans with Disabilities Act

500

This ended in 1973, creating an all-volunteer armed forces.

The military draft

500

Urban renewal often displaced African American communities, including these neighborhoods in Richmond and Charlottesville

Jackson Ward and Vinegar Hill