white people supporting efforts to end segregation and discrimination in some places after the World War II
white people supporting efforts to end segregation and discrimination in some places after the World War II
In a 8 page paper, double-space, Times New Roman, please address the following question:
What made it so difficult for many white people to support efforts to end segregation and discrimination in schools, housing, and jobs in the two decades following World War II? 🎯 Your main source for answering this question should be Melba Beals’ Warriors Don’t Cry, ((but you are required to draw from at least two of the following primary documents)) :
- Southern Manifesto (1956) [Voices Of Freedom Book]
- Anne Braden, “A Letter from a white southern woman from Anne Braden”
http://www.annebradenfilm.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/BradenLetter.pdf
- James Baldwin debates William Buckley
- Martin Luther King Jr., Letter from a Birmingham Jail
https://web.cn.edu/kwheeler/documents/Letter_Birmingham_Jail.pdf
🎈 🎈 🎈 Notes: I need 2 to 3 pages today and the rest tomorrow
Melba Beals’ Warriors Don’t Cry
REQUIREMENTS
American History II Hist-152h description 8 pages, Double Spacing
Answer Preview…………….
The Civil Rights Movement reached its peak after World War II and the main aim was to end segregation, especially in the South. In the fight to desegregate the South, three distinct groups can be pinpointed as consisting the majority of the nation’s population. Of course, there were the activists, protestors, and leaders who called for the abolition of segregation and this group had a black majority with a few white people assisting in the effort. On the other extreme,…………………
APA 2783 words