Timeline of the Civil Rights Movement in Birmingham: Difference between revisions

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* Friday, [[July 12]]: The Fifth U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals ordered that Birmingham City Schools must be desegregated, beginning that fall.
* Friday, [[July 12]]: The Fifth U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals ordered that Birmingham City Schools must be desegregated, beginning that fall.
* Tuesday, [[July 16]]: A public meeting regarding school desegregation ended in shouting and disorder.
* Tuesday, [[July 16]]: A public meeting regarding school desegregation ended in shouting and disorder.
* Tuesday, [[July 23]]: The [[Birmingham City Council]] repealed all of its [[Segregation laws]].
* Tuesday, [[July 23]]: The [[Birmingham City Council]] repealed all of its [[Segregation laws]] and reopened [[Birmingham City Parks|city parks]].
* Wednesday, [[July 31]]: The United States Department of Justice sued the [[Jefferson County Board of Registrars]] on behalf of black applicants deemed unqualified to vote.
* Wednesday, [[July 31]]: The United States Department of Justice sued the [[Jefferson County Board of Registrars]] on behalf of black applicants deemed unqualified to vote.
* Saturday, [[August 10]]: [[St James United Methodist Church (Warrior)|St James United Methodist Church]] in [[Warrior]] was destroyed by arsonists.
* Saturday, [[August 10]]: [[St James United Methodist Church (Warrior)|St James United Methodist Church]] in [[Warrior]] was destroyed by arsonists.

Revision as of 10:40, 3 January 2013

This is a Timeline of the Civil Rights Movement in Birmingham, covering related events throughout the Birmingham District during the Civil Rights Movement from 1935 to 1965:

Before 1954

1954

1955

1956

1957

1958

1959

1960

1961

1962

1963

A picketer outside Loveman's.

1964

1965

References

  • White, Marjorie Longenecker (1998) A Walk to Freedom: The Reverend Fred Shuttlesworth and the Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights, 1956-1964. Birmingham: Birmingham Historical Society. ISBN 0943994241
Civil Rights Movement (19561965)
Documents Segregation laws · ACMHR Declaration of Principles · Nonviolence pledge · Birmingham Manifesto · A Call For Unity · Appeal for Law and Order · Letter from Birmingham Jail · Birmingham Truce · Civil Rights Act of 1964
Events Freedom Rides · Who Speaks for Birmingham? · Selective Buying Campaign · Birmingham Campaign · Good Friday march · Children's Crusade · Police dogs and firehoses · List of racially-motivated bombings · 1963 church bombing · May 1963 riot
Organizations Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights · Birmingham City Commission · Ku Klux Klan · Miles College · NAACP · Southern Christian Leadership Conference
Activists Fred Shuttlesworth · Martin Luther King Jr · A. D. King · James Bevel · Frank Dukes · Edward Gardner · Lola Hendricks · Colonel Stone Johnson · Autherine Lucy · Vivian Malone · Joseph Lowery · James Orange · Nelson Smith Jr · John Porter · Abraham Woods Jr
Other figures Albert Boutwell · Robert Chambliss · Bull Connor · A. G. Gaston · Art Hanes · Lucius Pitts · Sidney Smyer · J. B. Stoner · "8 white clergymen" · Virgil Ware · "4 little girls"
Places Kelly Ingram Park · A. G. Gaston Motel · Movement churches
Legacy Birmingham Civil Rights Heritage Trail · Birmingham Civil Rights Institute · Birmingham Pledge