What events characterized the struggle for voting rights in the mid-1960s, and how did this period represent a shift from early years of the civil rights movement since Brown v. Board of Education?

Please provide the best answer for the statement.


Answer: An ideal response should:
a. Identify the Selma-to-Montgomery March as a key event illustrative of mass marches and protests for voting rights.
b. Describe the increased violent resistance surrounding voting rights campaigns which contrasted with the harsh but limited retaliation of urban whites against the sit-in movement.
c. Consider what factors led to the issuance of the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
d. Explain how violence and protest in cities outside the South such as Los Angeles became a major point of focus following the Voting Right Act’s victory, which primarily took on southern segregation laws.

History

You might also like to view...

What percentage of the U.S. population did blacks comprise, according to the U.S. census in 2000?

A) 25 percent B) 20 percent C) 16 percent D) 12 percent

History

When Truman became president many observers believed that he

a. would push for much greater government intervention in the economy than Roosevelt had. b. would undo much of the New Deal. c. would not defend the rights of minorities. d. would be soft on communism.

History

The first state to ratify the Constitution in 1787 was

A. Delaware. B. Rhode Island. C. Connecticut. D. New Hampshire. E. New Jersey.

History

The Lend-Lease Act of 1941 empowered the president to:

A) put battleships in the Atlantic to protect American interests in Asia. B) lend weapons and supplies to all nations fighting either the Germans or the Japanese. C) lend American soldiers to France and Britain to assist them in war. D) send advisers to assist any country fighting the Germans. E) form a peace alliance with Hitler in exchange for arms and ammunition.

History