Archives of African American Achievemen Week2 2009

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Transcript

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Slide Text

Slide Notes


Archives of African American Achievement

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A Week of Accomplishments


Week 1: Reconstruction (1865-1877)
Week 1: Reconstruction (1865-1877)

Week 2: Civil Rights Movement (1955-1968)

Week 3: Black Power Movement (1966-1975)

Week 4: Entrepreneurial Movement (1970s – today)

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Asa Philip Randolph 1889 1979 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom August 28 1963


Founder, Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters; president, Negro American Labor Council; vice president, AFL-CIO
Founder, Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters; president, Negro American Labor Council; vice president, AFL-CIO
250,000 participants of all colors
Closing address: Martin Luther King, Jr., I Have a Dream
Helped lead to the Civil Rights Act (1964) and the National Voting Rights Act (1965)

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Joseph E Lowery born 1921 Southern Christian Leadership Conference SCLC


Co-founder and president of SCLC (1977-1997)
Co-founder and president of SCLC (1977-1997)
SCLC major campaigns: Citizenship Schools, Birmingham campaign, March on Washington, Selma Voting Rights Campaign and March to Montgomery, Poor People's Campaign
Delivered inaugural benediction
Today, heads The Lowery Institute for Justice and Human Rights at Clark Atlanta University

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The African American Struggle to Vote

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Thurgood Marshall b 1908 d 1993


First African American Supreme Court Justice (1964)
First African American Supreme Court Justice (1964)
Chief counsel of NAACP
Argued against the “separate but equal” doctrine in Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka

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Constance Baker Motley b 1921 d 2005


First African American woman accepted to Columbia Law School
First African American woman accepted to Columbia Law School
First African American woman elected to the New York Senate
First woman and first African American woman president of Manhattan
First African American woman appointed to serve as a federal district judge.
Worked for NAACP 16 years

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