Warriors Don't Cry
March
Chasing King's Killer
Major Events
Major Events 2
100

This elder character watches over the house, sometimes with a shotgun.

Grandma India

100

John Lewis was originally from ____________.

Alabama

100

What was MLK's childhood like?

He came from a loving, close-knit family. His father was a preacher, which inspired him to develop his speech skills.

100

There were over 4,400 ________________ between the Civil War and the 1960s in America.

lynchings

100

When people stop buying or using something to express their disagreement with it, this form of protest is known as a ______________.

boycott

200

Melba's guard is named __________________.

Danny

200

Name three types of protest or direct action that John Lewis took part in.

Freedom Rides, Sit-ins, Marches, Boycotts, voting registration drives, etc.

200

MLK was killed by ____________ on the balcony of the _______________ Motel in Memphis, Tennessee.

James Earl Ray

Lorraine

200

________________ Laws were any state or local laws that enforced or legalized racial segregation.

Jim Crow

200

In 1955, two women refused to give up their seats to white passengers in Montgomery, Alabama, which led to a movement and the end of segregation on buses. Name both of them.

Rosa Parks and Claudette Colvin

300

This character is Melba's closest friend from the Little Rock Nine.

Minnijean

300

This prominent Black leader had mutual respect with John Lewis, but was not truly considered to be part of the Civil Rights Movement due to his strategical and idealogical differences from MLK and others.

Malcolm X

300

This person was a close friend of MLK, and after the assassination, he took on MLK's role as a major leader of the Civil Rights Movement. (Hint: his initials are R.A.)

Ralph Abernathy

300

Name two major accomplishments of the Civil Rights Movement.

Integration in schools

Desegregation on public transportation

Voting Rights

Revolutionizing protest methods to inspire future generations.

300

Name one of challenges faced by those participating in the Montgomery Bus Boycott?

- difficult to get to work and school without using the buses

- threats and acts of violence

- the city stopped allowing discount cab fares for black passengers

400

This white student jokes around with segregationists but secretly offers help to Melba.

Link

400
Lewis was an active member of the SNCC. What does SNCC stand for?

Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee

400

In addition to fighting for Civil Rights, Martin Luther King Jr. also fought for _________________.

peace in Vietnam

worker's rights

union rights

etc.

400

_____________ was visiting family in Mississippi when he was tragically murdered, and his killers were not prosecuted.

Emmett Till

400

What was the main point of MLK's Letter From Birmingham Jail? How did it differ in tone from some of his other speeches/writings?

He argued that progress was going too slow. The oppressor will never willfully grant change, and many so-called allies urge patience for change. There is never a completely "convenient" time for change, so they must push forward and work for progress. It differed in tone because there was a greater sense of frustration, whereas usually he took a more hopeful and optimistic tone.

500

After Central High School's initial attempt at integration does not go according to plan, Melba moves to ___________________ where she lives with the McCabe family who she describes as very loving and kind.

Santa Rosa, California

500

March 7, 1965 became known as "Bloody Sunday." Civil Rights activists were brutally attacked while crossing the Edmund Pettus Bridge in ____________, Alabama.

Selma

500

James Earl Ray used many aliases (fake names). Name one of them.

Eric Starvo Galt, WC Herron, Harvey Lowmyer, James McBride, James O'Connor, James Walton, James Walyon, John Willard, Ramon George Sneid

500

This landmark 1954 court case ruled segregation in schools to be unconstitutional.

Brown vs. Board of Ed
500

Who was the president that signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964?

Lyndon Johnson