Suburbs & Economy
Civil Rights & Law
People & Movements
Culture & Society
100

What were the mass-produced suburban towns called?

Levittown

100

 1954 Supreme Court case declared racial segregation in public schools unconstitutional.

Brown v. BOE
100

famous civil rights leader who preached nonviolence and delivered "I Have a Dream.

MLK
100

 genre of music, led by Chuck Berry, was popular among teenagers in Post-War America.

Rock and Roll

200

This government program helped WWII vets buy homes and attend college

GI Bill

200

1896 Supreme Court case that established "Separate but Equal."

Plessy vs. Ferguson

200

civil rights leader who advocated for Black empowerment and sometimes used more aggressive tactics.

Malcolm X

200

Migration of White families to suburbs to avoid integration in cities was called what?

White Flight

300

"ideal" life many Americans dreamed of after the war,

The American Dream

300

phrase justified segregation but was proven unequal by Brown v. Board

"Separate, But Equal"

300

This organization fought for Black rights through the legal system.

NAACP

300

This artist is famous for paintings showing African American life and struggles.

Jacob Lawrence

400

practice by banks denied loans to minority neighborhoods

Redlining

400

Legal segregation by law, especially in the South, is called what?

De Jure Segregation

400

Name of activists who rode buses into segregated southern states to challenge segregation laws.

Freedom Riders

400

 The social gatherings where students challenged segregation by refusing to leave lunch counters were called?

Sit-ins

500

government agency insured home loans and promoted suburban growth but often excluded minorities.

FHA

500

 name of lawyer that argued many civil rights cases and later became the first Black Supreme Court Justice.

Thurgood Marshall

500

 the group led by MLK that coordinated nonviolent protests and civil rights campaigns

Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC)

500

 name of the practice of killing Black people without legal trial, common in early 20th century America.

Lynching