Baldwin's Life
Civil Rights Era
Vocabulary
Vocabulary 2
Bonus
100

Baldwin grew up in this New York City neighborhood.

Harlem

100

This system of racial segregation was challenged during Baldwin’s lifetime.

Jim Crow Era

100

Prolonged unfair treatment of a group of people.

Oppression

100

Paying workers unfairly.

Injustice

100

This woman’s arrest for refusing to give up her seat helped spark the Montgomery Bus Boycott.

Rosa Parks

200

Before becoming famous, Baldwin moved to this European city to escape racism in America.

Paris

200

Baldwin often wrote about inequality based on this social concept.

Race

200

The qualities and beliefs that make a person who they are.

Identity

200

Women in some countries have been denied education.

Oppression

200

A peaceful protest against unfair laws is an example of this kind of action during the Civil Rights Movement.

Resistance

300

Baldwin worked as this type of religious leader as a teenager.

Preacher

300

This 1963 event featured Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech.

March on Washington

300

A situation that is unfair or violates rights.

Injustice

300

Certain neighborhoods did not allow people of color to live there.

Segregation

300

This word describes unfair treatment of people based on characteristics like race, religion, or gender.

Discrimination

400

What year was he born.

1924

400

This movement sought equal rights for Black Americans during the 1950s and 1960s.

Civil Rights Movement

400

Treating everyone fairly and giving the same rights

Equality

400

A person struggles to understand where they belong in society.

Identity

400

This 1955–1956 protest in Alabama began after Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on a bus and led to a major Supreme Court decision ending bus segregation.

Montgomery Bus Boycott

500

Baldwin used this form of writing to share his opinions about race, identity, and American society.

Essays

500

This 1954 Supreme Court case declared that segregated public schools were unconstitutional and helped end “separate but equal” education.

Brown vs Board

500

 Separating people based on race or other traits

Segregation
500

All citizens are allowed to vote regardless of race or religion.

Equality

500

This federal law, passed in 1965, made it illegal to prevent people from voting based on race.

Voting Rights Act