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

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* [[1947]]: [[Arthur Shores]] filed the first legal challenge to Birmingham's [[segregated zoning]] laws on behalf of [[Samuel Mathews]].
* [[1947]]: [[Arthur Shores]] filed the first legal challenge to Birmingham's [[segregated zoning]] laws on behalf of [[Samuel Mathews]].
* [[1947]]: [[Samuel Mathews]] became the first African American to legally purchase a residence in [[North Smithfield]]. His house was bombed on the first night, touching off the "[[Battle of North Smithfield]]" and a long [[List of racially-motivated bombings|string of bombings]] intended to terrorize African Americans from moving into formerly white-only neighborhoods.
* [[1947]]: [[Samuel Mathews]] became the first African American to legally purchase a residence in [[North Smithfield]]. His house was bombed on the first night, touching off the "[[Battle of North Smithfield]]" and a long [[List of racially-motivated bombings|string of bombings]] intended to terrorize African Americans from moving into formerly white-only neighborhoods.
* [[August 17]], [[1949]]: The [[Birmingham Business League]], [[Birmingham Emancipation Association]] and the [[NAACP]] organized a protest at which approximately 2,000 Black residents protested at [[Smithfield Court]] for an end to [[list of racially motivated bombings]]. The crowd approved resolutions in favor of expanding real estate sales to Black buyers, and expressed support for the work of attorney Arthur Shores.
* [[August 17]], [[1949]]: The [[Birmingham Business League]], [[Birmingham Emancipation Association]] and the [[NAACP]] organized a protest at which approximately 2,000 Black residents protested at [[Smithfield Court]] for an end to [[List of racially motivated bombings|terrorist activities]]. The crowd approved resolutions in favor of expanding real estate sales to Black buyers, and expressed support for the work of attorney Arthur Shores.
* [[1950]]: [[Arthur Shores]] won another challenge to Birmingham's still-[[segregated zoning]] laws in [[Clarence Mullins]]' court on behalf of [[Mary Means Monk]].
* [[1950]]: [[Arthur Shores]] won another challenge to Birmingham's still-[[segregated zoning]] laws in [[Clarence Mullins]]' court on behalf of [[Mary Means Monk]].
* [[1952]]: [[Arthur Shores]] won a federal case that resulted in his appointment to the [[Jefferson County Executive Democratic Committee]].
* [[1952]]: [[Arthur Shores]] won a federal case that resulted in his appointment to the [[Jefferson County Executive Democratic Committee]].
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* [[February 3]]: [[Autherine Lucy]] successfully enrolled as a graduate library science student at the [[University of Alabama]].
* [[February 3]]: [[Autherine Lucy]] successfully enrolled as a graduate library science student at the [[University of Alabama]].
* [[February 6]]: Lucy was suspended from classes due to the University's inability to provide a safe learning environment.
* [[February 6]]: Lucy was suspended from classes due to the University's inability to provide a safe learning environment.
* [[March 7]]: Martin Luther King Jr met in Birmingham with [[Bayard Rustin]] and [[William Worthy]] to discuss strategy for the Montgomery Improvement Association.
* [[April 10]]: Kenneth Adams, E. L. Vinson & Willis Vinson assaulted singer Nat King Cole on stage during a performance at [[Municipal Auditorium]]. They were each sentenced to 180 days in jail.
* [[April 10]]: Kenneth Adams, E. L. Vinson & Willis Vinson assaulted singer Nat King Cole on stage during a performance at [[Municipal Auditorium]]. They were each sentenced to 180 days in jail.
* [[March 12]]: 101 Southern congressmen entered the ''[[Southern Manifesto]]'' into the ''Congressional Record'', objecting to the implications of ''Brown v. Board of Education''.
* [[March 12]]: 101 Southern congressmen entered the ''[[Southern Manifesto]]'' into the ''Congressional Record'', objecting to the implications of ''Brown v. Board of Education''.
* [[May 26]]: A Montgomery judge banned the [[NAACP]] from operating in Alabama.
* [[May 26]]: A Montgomery judge banned the [[NAACP]] from operating in Alabama.
* [[June 5]]: The [[Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights]] (ACMHR) was created at a mass meeting at [[Sardis Baptist Church]]. Mass meetings were held each Monday at various [[movement churches]] throughout the movement.
* [[June 4]]: A committee of 11 ministers and laymen met at the [[Smith & Gaston Funeral Home]] to discuss resolutions to present to a mass meeting for creation of a new human rights organization following the order banning the NAACP from operating in the state.
* [[June 5]]: The [[Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights]] (ACMHR) was created at a mass meeting at [[Sardis Baptist Church]], called by [[Fred Shuttlesworth]], [[Nelson Smith Jr]], [[T. L. Lane]], [[R. L. Alford]] and [[G. E. Pruitt]]. Mass meetings were held each Monday at various [[movement churches]] throughout the movement.
* [[August 7]]: ACMHR's incorporation papers were filed at the [[Jefferson County Court of Probate]].
* [[August 7]]: ACMHR's incorporation papers were filed at the [[Jefferson County Court of Probate]].
* [[November 13]]: The United  States Supreme Court issued its ruling in ''Browder v. Gayle'', prohibiting segregation of Montgomery city busses.
* [[November 13]]: The United  States Supreme Court issued its ruling in ''Browder v. Gayle'', prohibiting segregation of Montgomery city busses.
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* [[May 4]]: [[Freedom Rides|Freedom Riders]] left Washington D.C. on Greyhound and Trailways buses, bound for New Orleans.
* [[May 4]]: [[Freedom Rides|Freedom Riders]] left Washington D.C. on Greyhound and Trailways buses, bound for New Orleans.
* [[May 14]]: A [[Freedom Rides|Freedom Riders]]' bus pulled into the [[Birmingham Trailways Station]] and was met by a violent mob and no police protection. Meanwhile, volunteers from the [[Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights]] brought more injured riders from Anniston to [[University Hospital]].
* [[May 14]]: A [[Freedom Rides|Freedom Riders]]' bus pulled into the [[Birmingham Trailways Station]] and was met by a violent mob and no police protection. Meanwhile, volunteers from the [[Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights]] brought more injured riders from Anniston to [[University Hospital]].
* [[May 15]]: Greyhound drivers refused to carry Freedom Riders onward from Birmingham.
* [[May 17]]: [[Fred Shuttlesworth]] was arrested for failure to obey a [[Birmingham Police Department|Birmingham Police]] officer.
* [[May 17]]: [[Fred Shuttlesworth]] was arrested for failure to obey a [[Birmingham Police Department|Birmingham Police]] officer.
* [[May 18]]: The CBS documentary "[[Who Speaks for Birmingham?]]" aired nationally.
* [[May 18]]: The CBS documentary "[[Who Speaks for Birmingham?]]" aired nationally.
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* [[July 24]]: Judge [[Hobart Grooms]] issued an injunction against segregated service at the [[Dobbs House Flight Kitchen]] at [[Birmingham-Shuttlesworth International Airport|Birmingham Municipal Airport]].
* [[July 24]]: Judge [[Hobart Grooms]] issued an injunction against segregated service at the [[Dobbs House Flight Kitchen]] at [[Birmingham-Shuttlesworth International Airport|Birmingham Municipal Airport]].
* May: During the [[SCLC]]'s annual meeting, Shuttlesworth invited King to lead demonstrations in Birmingham.
* May: During the [[SCLC]]'s annual meeting, Shuttlesworth invited King to lead demonstrations in Birmingham.
* September: Fred Shuttlesworth joined Southern Christian Leadership Conference leaders at their training center in Dorchester, Georgia for a 3-day session to discuss [[Wyatt Tee Walker]]'s plans for the upcoming Birmingham Campaign or "Project C".
* [[November 6]]: A [[1962 Birmingham special election]], widely viewed as a referendum on the power wielded by [[Bull Connor]], results in a change to a [[Birmingham City Council|Mayor-Council]] form of government.
* [[November 6]]: A [[1962 Birmingham special election]], widely viewed as a referendum on the power wielded by [[Bull Connor]], results in a change to a [[Birmingham City Council|Mayor-Council]] form of government.
* [[December 14]]: [[Bethel Baptist Church]] was bombed a third time, the explosion occurred across the street, but still shattered windows at the church and parsonage.
* [[December 14]]: [[Bethel Baptist Church]] was bombed a third time, the explosion occurred across the street, but still shattered windows at the church and parsonage.
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=== [[Birmingham Campaign]] ([[April 3]]-[[May 10]]) ===
=== [[Birmingham Campaign]] ([[April 3]]-[[May 10]]) ===
* Wednesday, [[April 3]]: ("B-Day") The "[[Birmingham Manifesto]]" was issued and the first organized sit-ins took place at downtown lunch counters. [[Kress]], [[Loveman's]], [[Pizitz]] and [[Woolworth's]] closed their lunch counters. Twenty demonstrators were arrested at [[Britt's Cafeteria]]. The feature film version of "To Kill a Mockingbird" had its local premiere at the [[Melba Theater]] downtown, with child stars [[Mary Badham]] and [[Phillip Alford]] in attendance.
* Wednesday, [[April 3]]: ("B-Day") The "[[Birmingham Manifesto]]" was issued and the first organized sit-ins took place at downtown lunch counters. [[Kress]], [[Loveman's]], [[Pizitz]] and [[Woolworth's]] closed their lunch counters. Twenty demonstrators were arrested at [[Britt's Cafeteria]]. The feature film version of "To Kill a Mockingbird" had its local premiere at the [[Melba Theater]] downtown, with child stars [[Mary Badham]] and [[Phillip Alford]] in attendance.
* Thursday, [[April 4]]:  [[Martin Luther King Jr]] led a small group in a march to [[Birmingham City Hall]]. A mass meeting was held at [[St James Baptist Church]] in the evening.
* Thursday, [[April 4]]:  [[Martin Luther King Jr]] led a small group in a march to [[Birmingham City Hall]]. A mass meeting was held at [[St James Baptist Church (Northside)|St James Baptist Church]] in the evening.
* Friday, [[April 5]]: Ten demonstrators were arrested at lunch counters at [[Lane Drugs]] and the [[Tutwiler Drug Store]]. A mass meeting was held at [[Thirgood Memorial CME Church]] in the evening.
* Friday, [[April 5]]: Ten demonstrators were arrested at lunch counters at [[Lane Drugs]] and the [[Tutwiler Drug Store]]. A mass meeting was held at [[Thirgood Memorial CME Church]] in the evening.
* Saturday, [[April 6]]: [[Fred Shuttlesworth]] and [[Charles Billups]] led a march from the [[A. G. Gaston Motel]] toward [[Birmingham City Hall]]. Police met the demonstrators at [[18th Street North|18th Street]] and [[5th Avenue North]] and arrested 30 marchers.
* Saturday, [[April 6]]: [[Fred Shuttlesworth]] and [[Charles Billups]] led a march from the [[A. G. Gaston Motel]] toward [[Birmingham City Hall]]. Police met the demonstrators at [[18th Street North|18th Street]] and [[5th Avenue North]] and arrested 30 marchers.
* Sunday, [[April 7]] (Palm  Sunday): Ministers [[John Thomas Porter]], [[Nelson H. Smith]] and [[A. D. King]] [[Palm Sunday march|led a group of more than 1,000 marchers from [[St Paul Methodist Church]] to protest the jailing of Shuttlesworth and other leaders the previous day. The march was stopped near [[Henley School]] where the demonstrators knelt in prayer. Twenty-six marchers were arrested and police dogs were used to disperse onlookers. [[Leroy Allen]], one of the marchers, was knocked down and bitten by a dog.
* Sunday, [[April 7]] (Palm  Sunday): Ministers [[John Thomas Porter]], [[Nelson Smith Jr]] and [[A. D. King]] [[Palm Sunday march|led a group of more than 1,000 marchers from [[St Paul Methodist Church]] to protest the jailing of Shuttlesworth and other leaders the previous day. The march was stopped near [[Henley School]] where the demonstrators knelt in prayer. Twenty-six marchers were arrested and police dogs were used to disperse onlookers. [[Leroy Allen]], one of the marchers, was knocked down and bitten by a dog.
* Monday, [[April 8]]: Small-scale "hit and run" sit-ins took place at several downtown lunch counters.
* Monday, [[April 8]]: Small-scale "hit and run" sit-ins took place at several downtown lunch counters.
* Monday, [[April 9]]: Eight picketers, one a white man from Illinois, were arrested for protesting outside [[Loveman's]]. Blind entertainer Al Hibbler joined the protesters, but was not arrested. He enjoined fellow protesters to help him into a paddy wagon, but was released without charge.
* Monday, [[April 9]]: Eight picketers, one a white man from Illinois, were arrested for protesting outside [[Loveman's]]. Blind entertainer Al Hibbler joined the protesters, but was not arrested. He enjoined fellow protesters to help him into a paddy wagon, but was released without charge.
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* Friday, [[April 12]] (Good Friday): [[Martin Luther King Jr]], [[Ralph Abernathy]] and [[Fred Shuttlesworth]] led a [[Good Friday march]] from [[Zion Hill Baptist Church]] and were met by police at [[18th Street North|18th Street]] and [[5th Avenue North]]. The marchers were arrested for parading without a permit. White clergymen issued "[[A Call for Unity]]", urging an end to demonstrations as a show of support for the incoming city council. Another letter, "[[A Statement by Some of the Negro Leaders of Metropolitan Birmingham]]" was also printed, explaining that the demonstrations were evidence of "striving" rather than "strife", and urging the creation of a bi-racial council to discuss ways both races could "live together in human dignity".
* Friday, [[April 12]] (Good Friday): [[Martin Luther King Jr]], [[Ralph Abernathy]] and [[Fred Shuttlesworth]] led a [[Good Friday march]] from [[Zion Hill Baptist Church]] and were met by police at [[18th Street North|18th Street]] and [[5th Avenue North]]. The marchers were arrested for parading without a permit. White clergymen issued "[[A Call for Unity]]", urging an end to demonstrations as a show of support for the incoming city council. Another letter, "[[A Statement by Some of the Negro Leaders of Metropolitan Birmingham]]" was also printed, explaining that the demonstrations were evidence of "striving" rather than "strife", and urging the creation of a bi-racial council to discuss ways both races could "live together in human dignity".
* Saturday, [[April 13]] : Six picketers were arrested at [[Atlantic Mills]] at 1216 [[8th Avenue North]].
* Saturday, [[April 13]] : Six picketers were arrested at [[Atlantic Mills]] at 1216 [[8th Avenue North]].
* Sunday, [[April 14]]: (Easter Sunday): Volunteers conducted "[[Kneel-ins]]" at area white churches. Five black visitors were seated at [[1st Baptist Church]] and two were seated at [[1st Presbyterian Church]]. African-American visitors were denied entrance to several other white churches. [[John Porter]], [[N. H. Smith]] and [[Frank Dukes]] were among thirty-two demonstrators, of approximately 1,000 who marched, who were arrested en route to [[Birmingham City Hall]]. Later another "[[March to the Jail]]" was broken up by police.
* Sunday, [[April 14]]: (Easter Sunday): Volunteers conducted "[[Kneel-ins]]" at area white churches. Five black visitors were seated at [[1st Baptist Church]] and two were seated at [[1st Presbyterian Church]]. African-American visitors were denied entrance to several other white churches. [[John Porter]], [[Nelson Smith Jr]] and [[Frank Dukes]] were among thirty-two demonstrators, of approximately 1,000 who marched, who were arrested en route to [[Birmingham City Hall]]. Later another "[[March to the Jail]]" was broken up by police.
* Monday, [[April 15]]: Five protesters were arrested at [[Britt's Cafeteria]] and four more at [[Sears]]. [[Albert Boutwell]] and the new [[Birmingham City Council]] were sworn in, but the existing [[Birmingham City Commission]] refused to hand over power, resulting in parallel governments occupying City Hall.
* Monday, [[April 15]]: Five protesters were arrested at [[Britt's Cafeteria]] and four more at [[Sears]]. [[Albert Boutwell]] and the new [[Birmingham City Council]] were sworn in, but the existing [[Birmingham City Commission]] refused to hand over power, resulting in parallel governments occupying City Hall.
* Tuesday, [[April 16]]: Two protesters at [[Bohemian Bakery]] were among seven people arrested for demonstrating. [[Martin Luther King, Jr]] completed his "[[Letter from Birmingham Jail]]"
* Tuesday, [[April 16]]: Two protesters at [[Bohemian Bakery]] were among seven people arrested for demonstrating. [[Martin Luther King, Jr]] completed his "[[Letter from Birmingham Jail]]"
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* Tuesday, [[May 7]]: Student marchers fanned out and converged on the downtown business district at lunchtime, avoiding police blockades and becoming newly visible to the city's white citizenry. Back at [[Kelly Ingram Park]] police knocked Shuttlesworth off his feet with spray from a fire hose, hospitalizing him.
* Tuesday, [[May 7]]: Student marchers fanned out and converged on the downtown business district at lunchtime, avoiding police blockades and becoming newly visible to the city's white citizenry. Back at [[Kelly Ingram Park]] police knocked Shuttlesworth off his feet with spray from a fire hose, hospitalizing him.
* Wednesday, [[May 8]]: Moderate black leaders and federal negotiators formulated a truce with the business community to end demonstrations. Shuttlesworth checked himself out of the hospital to confront the SCLC leaders, insisting that the compromises were unacceptable and demanding more specific concessions.
* Wednesday, [[May 8]]: Moderate black leaders and federal negotiators formulated a truce with the business community to end demonstrations. Shuttlesworth checked himself out of the hospital to confront the SCLC leaders, insisting that the compromises were unacceptable and demanding more specific concessions.
* Friday, [[May 10]]: The [[Birmingham Truce]] was announced by Shuttlesworth at a press conference at the [[A. G. Gaston Motel]], ending the [[Birmingham Campaign]]. He collapsed after his prepared remarks while King continued to field questions.
* Friday, [[May 10]]: The [[Birmingham Truce]] was announced by Shuttlesworth, King and Abernathy at a press conference at the [[A. G. Gaston Motel]], ending the [[Birmingham Campaign]]. Shuttlesworth, affected by his injuries from Tuesday's march, collapsed after his prepared remarks while King continued to field questions.


===Aftermath===
===Aftermath===
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* Wednesday, [[August 28]]: Martin Luther King, Jr delivered his "I Have a Dream" speech at the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.
* Wednesday, [[August 28]]: Martin Luther King, Jr delivered his "I Have a Dream" speech at the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.
* Friday, [[August 30]]: Birmingham school officials announce that [[West End High School]], [[Ramsay High School]] and [[Graymont Elementary School]] will be desegregated for the upcoming term, with a total of five black students in classes.
* Friday, [[August 30]]: Birmingham school officials announce that [[West End High School]], [[Ramsay High School]] and [[Graymont Elementary School]] will be desegregated for the upcoming term, with a total of five black students in classes.
* Monday, [[September 2]]: The [[United Klans of America]] hosted a "Public Speaking" at the [[Graymont Armory]] near  [[Legion Field]]. About 900 people heard [[Bobby Shelton]] and others rail against integration.
* Monday, [[September 2]]: Governor Wallace vowed not to back down at a barbecue attended by 10,000 in [[Ensley Park]].
* Monday, [[September 2]]: Governor Wallace vowed not to back down at a barbecue attended by 10,000 in [[Ensley Park]].
* Tuesday ,[[September 3]]: Alabama State Troopers arrived uninvited to block school integration in Birmingham.
* Tuesday ,[[September 3]]: Alabama State Troopers arrived uninvited to block school integration in Birmingham.
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* Spring: [[Martin Luther King, Jr]] recollects the events of the [[Birmingham Campaign]] in the book ''[[Why We Can't Wait]]''.
* Spring: [[Martin Luther King, Jr]] recollects the events of the [[Birmingham Campaign]] in the book ''[[Why We Can't Wait]]''.
* [[March 29]]: Graham's crusade insisted that all venues for the [[1964 Billy Graham Easter Rally|Billy Graham Easter Rally]] be open to all races without separate seating.
* [[March 29]]: Graham's crusade insisted that all venues for the [[1964 Billy Graham Easter Rally|Billy Graham Easter Rally]] be open to all races without separate seating.
* [[June 9]]: [[James Bevel]] and [[Robert Clark]] led approximately 350 protesters in [[Tuscaloosa]] and were arrested for vagrancy. Most of the protesters dispersed rather than "filling the jail" as hoped.
* [[July 2]]: President Johnson signed the [[Civil Rights Act of 1964]].
* [[July 2]]: President Johnson signed the [[Civil Rights Act of 1964]].
* [[July 7]]: Nine African-American teenagers were chased from [[McLellan's]] lunch counter in downtown [[Bessemer]] and beaten. No arrests.
* [[July 7]]: Nine African-American teenagers were chased from [[McLellan's]] lunch counter in downtown [[Bessemer]] and beaten. No arrests.
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==[[1965]]==
==[[1965]]==
* [[March 7]]: The Selma to Montgomery March was stopped violently by police.
* [[March 7]]: The Selma to Montgomery March was stopped violently by police during the group's crossing of the Edmund Pettus Bridge.
* [[March 21]]: [[Our Lady Queen of the Universe Catholic Church]] and [[A. D. King]]'s [[A. D. King residence|residence]] were targeted by bombs, neither of which exploded.
* [[March 21]]: [[Our Lady Queen of the Universe Catholic Church]] and [[A. D. King]]'s [[A. D. King residence|residence]] were targeted by bombs, neither of which exploded.
* [[March 29]]: [[Martin Luther King Jr]] called for a boycott of products made in Alabama and a withdrawal of federal support for state activities as a response to [[George Wallace]]'s policies.
* [[August 6]]: President Johnson signed the [[Voting Rights Act of 1965]].
* [[August 6]]: President Johnson signed the [[Voting Rights Act of 1965]].


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* October: [[Fred Shuttlesworth]], [[John Porter]], [[T. L. Fisher]] and [[J. W. Hayes]] were arrested before they could turn themselves in on contempt charges stemming from the 1963 marches.
* October: [[Fred Shuttlesworth]], [[John Porter]], [[T. L. Fisher]] and [[J. W. Hayes]] were arrested before they could turn themselves in on contempt charges stemming from the 1963 marches.
* [[October 30]]: [[Martin Luther King Jr]], [[Ralph Abernathy]], [[Wyatt Walker]], and [[A. D. King]] returned to Birmingham to surrender themselves on contempt charges stemming from the 1963 marches.
* [[October 30]]: [[Martin Luther King Jr]], [[Ralph Abernathy]], [[Wyatt Walker]], and [[A. D. King]] returned to Birmingham to surrender themselves on contempt charges stemming from the 1963 marches.
* [[November 10]]: [[Asbury Howard]] and the [[Bessemer Voters League]] hosted a rally with Texas State Senator Barbara Jordan at [[New Zion Baptist Church]]. ([https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth595004/m1/1/ link to flyer])


==[[1968]]==
==[[1968]]==
* [[March 20]]: [[Martin Luther King Jr]], [[Ralph Abernathy]], and [[Hosea Williams]] spoke at a "Poor People's Campaign" rally in [[Bessemer]]. ([https://digital.libraries.psu.edu/digital/collection/rabin/id/2406/rec/1 transcript])
* [[April 4]]: [[James Earl Ray]] murdered [[Martin Luther King Jr]] in Memphis, Tennessee.
* [[April 4]]: [[James Earl Ray]] murdered [[Martin Luther King Jr]] in Memphis, Tennessee.
* [[April 6]]: 300 students [[1968 Tuskegee student uprising|barricaded]] a meeting of [[Tuskegee University|Tuskegee Institute]]'s board of trustees to demand changes to the curriculum.
* [[May 8]]: A caravan from Birmingham to Washington D.C. for the [[SCLC]]'s "Poor People's Campaign" was scheduled.
* [[May 8]]: A caravan from Birmingham to Washington D.C. for the [[SCLC]]'s "Poor People's Campaign" was scheduled.


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== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[List of racially-motivated bombings]]
* [[List of racially-motivated bombings]]
* [[Timeline of Martin Luther King Jr in Birmingham]]


==References==
==References==

Latest revision as of 10:17, 7 April 2024

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

The Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights (ACMHR) was created in June 1956.

1957

1958

1959

1960

1961

1962

1963

Winter to early spring

A picketer outside Loveman's.

Birmingham Campaign (April 3-May 10)

Aftermath

Summer

Fall

  • Wednesday, September 25: Kenneth Royall and Earl Blaik arrived in Birmingham and were greeted by Mayor Albert Boutwell.
  • Wednesday evening, September 25: Two bombs exploded in Center Street South in Titusville, apparently intended to draw a crowd and then spray them with shrapnel. No one was hurt, but a deep crater was left in the street and shrapnel was sprayed into nearby walls.
  • Sunday, October 6: A full-page ad in the Birmingham News called on the City of Birmingham to consider hiring black police officers.
  • Sunday, October 20: Another full-age ad in the Birmingham News called on the city to tackle a number of unresolved tensions regarding race.
  • Tuesday, October 22: Birmingham rejected the proposal to hire black police officers.
  • Friday, November 22: President John Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas, Texas.

1964

1965

1966

1967

Hosea Williams led marchers protesting the incarceration of Martin Luther King Jr and other Civil Rights leaders on contempt charges in November 1967.

1968

After 1968

See also

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
  • McWhorter, Diane (2001) Carry Me Home: Birmingham, Alabama, The Climactic Battle of the Civil Rights Revolution. New York, New York: Simon and Schuster. ISBN 0743226488
  • Huntley, Horace & John W. McKerley (2009) Foot Soldiers for Democracy: The Men, Women, and Children of the Birmingham Civil Rights Movement. University of Illinois Press (link)
  • Wright, Barnett (January 1, 2013) "1963 in Birmingham, Alabama: A timeline of events". The Birmingham News
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