Sunday, February 28, 2016

1963: March on Washington



The Declaration of Independence states that “all men are created equal.” But even after the Civil War and the end of slavery, people of color found themselves treated unfairly. They weren’t allowed in many public schools, they had to eat at separate restaurants and use separate bathrooms, and they had to pay taxes and pass literacy tests to vote. The idea was to keep blacks “separate but equal.”

By the late 1950's a movement had started. People were demanding laws to protect their civil rights – rights that all free Americans are guaranteed as citizens of this country. One was Thurgood Marshall, a lawyer who went on to become the first black justice on the Supreme Court. Another was Rosa Parks, who refused to give up her bus seat to white passengers. One particularly influential speaker and activist was Martin Luther King Jr.

Roughly 250,000 people marched through Washington, D.C., on Aug. 28, 1963. Called “The March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom,” the event called the nation’s attention to the injustice and inequalities that black Americans faced because of the color of their skin.
In support of civil rights for all Americans, the demonstrators made their way from the Washington Monument to the Lincoln Memorial, where Martin Luther King Jr. gave his memorable and moving “I Have A Dream” speech.

A man with a dream

King was a minister from Alabama who became one of the leading voices of the civil rights movement. One of his first successes was the Montgomery Bus Boycott – a 382-day operation that led to the desegregation of buses.

King was threatened with violence and jail, and his house was even bombed, but this did little to stop him.


From then on King was at the forefront of the civil rights movement. He traveled across the country, organizing protests and marches to call attention to the struggle of black Americans.

Though on several occasions King was thrown in jail, he maintained a philosophy of nonviolence. King believed that fighting back would only make things worse, and the true path to victory could be achieved through preaching truth and acceptance.

In late 1962, civil rights activists started to organize what would become the largest civil rights demonstration in the history of the United States. It took awhile, but by June of 1963, they had put together an impressive group of leaders and speakers – including King – to help them.

The organizers of the march had to make sure people had a way of getting into the city. They had to make sure marchers knew where to go and what to do once they got there. They had to have doctors and nurses in case anyone needed first aid. They had to provide water, security, and be ready for any emergency. And they needed some way to pay for all of it. It was going to take fund raising, planning and lots of work.

On Aug. 28, the city swelled with marchers. They drove in. They bussed in. They took trains. Three student marchers walked and hitchhiked 700 miles to get there. A quarter million people waved signs and cheered and listened to speakers address the civil rights problems challenging America. The last speaker was Martin Luther King Jr.
“I am happy to join with you today in what will go down in history as the greatest demonstration for freedom in the history of our nation,” King began. His ensuing speech is remembered as one of the corner stones of the civil rights movement.
A year later, Congress passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which made segregation in public places illegal, required employers to provide equal employment opportunities, and protected the right to vote of every American, regardless of the color of their skin.


Watch this video..


And this video ...

CBS and ABC both covered the event. 

Comment: Do you think it would have been cool to attend this event? Why or why not? 

15 comments:

  1. I think there would have been pros and cons, obviously. But if I had to choose, I would have loved to had witnessed the "I Had a Dream" speech and the march. It was all so beautiful and full of love and acceptance and gives me chills as I listen to it again.

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  2. I think it would be super cool to attend this event because you would feel like you were actually there and would learn a lot.

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  3. I think that it would be awesome to be a part of something that inspiring and powerful but also, that is a lot of people.. so i would probably not want to attend.

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    1. i also agree with emma. their was a lot of people!

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    2. Same, I can't handle all of those people touching elbows with me.

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  4. the first thing i want to point out was that everybody that gave a comment or speech was black even the new guy was black. i think i would love to be at the meeting, it would be very interesting.

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  5. I think it would be super cool to attend that meeting. It would be such an honor to be there on that day. I really like Martin Luther King Jr and it would be cool to honor him like that. Although I would not like all the people there because I hate crowds.

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  6. I think it would have been really cool to attend that event because you would be able to tell your children about it and what happened there. It also would be pretty cool to be at the March on Washington when Martin Luther King Jr. is present.

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  7. I would have loved to be there to see the influential speeches.

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  8. I think it would have been interesting to go! I would have went. Such a great and historical moment with amazing speakers and people.

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  9. This is one of those events I would be perfectly content to watch on television. Too many deafeningly loud, pushy, and inspired people. Plus, going to the March, you probably wouldn't be able to see Dr. King anyway. On television, the angles and audio are better and you would actually be able to see him.

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  10. I think it would be cool to attend the speech, but I would probably be just as content to watch it on TV (if I had one :P). I thought it was amazing how many people came to the march, I couldn't imagine how crowded and loud it would be, yet there probably was a feeling of accomplishment among the people participating in the march.

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  11. I think it would be cool to be at the march. it would make me feel like I'm making a change in American history. that doesn't happen every day. and whether people who didn't attend the march knew that or not, i bet they regreted not going just like most people. and this is just based on the reading because my youtbue wasn't working for some reason. :/

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  12. I think it would have been cool to attend. :) I think it's wonderful that it was such a peaceful gathering and that no fighting broke out etc. ;)

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  13. Yes, it would be cool but I don't think that I would have wanted to have been there. To many people in one space :(. The good thing is that the African Americans got there freedom and there rights so that there would be no more segregation.

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