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  1. Vor 3 Tagen · Racial segregation became the law in most parts of the American South until the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s. These laws, known as Jim Crow laws, forced segregation of facilities and services, prohibited intermarriage, and denied suffrage. Impacts included:

  2. Vor 5 Tagen · Ministers picketing a Woolworth store in New York City to protest racial segregation at the lunch counters of the chain's Southern branches, 1960. (more) racial segregation. African Americans in a segregated waiting room at a railroad depot in Jacksonville, Florida, 1921. (more)

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Vor 5 Tagen · American civil rights movement, mass protest movement against racial segregation and discrimination in the southern United States that came to national prominence during the mid-1950s. This movement had its roots in the centuries-long efforts of enslaved Africans and their descendants to resist racial oppression and abolish the ...

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  4. Vor einem Tag · Florida (1964) Interracial marriages legalized by Loving v. Virginia (1967) The civil rights movement [b] was a social movement and campaign from 1954 to 1968 in the United States to abolish legalized racial segregation, discrimination, and disenfranchisement in the country.

  5. 17. Mai 2024 · In all, segregation levels changed little over the next decade, despite the bravery of Black students like the Little Rock Nine in 1957 and 6-year-old Ruby Bridges in New Orleans in 1960, who faced violent, racist mobs when they tried to desegregate their local schools.

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  6. Vor einem Tag · As the civil rights movement and the dismantling of Jim Crow laws in the 1950s and 1960s deepened existing racial tensions in much of the Southern U.S, a Republican Party electoral strategy—the Southern strategy—was enacted to increase political support among White voters in the South by appealing to racism against African Americans.

  7. 9. Mai 2024 · The sit-in movement was a nonviolent movement of the U.S. civil rights era that began in Greensboro, North Carolina, in 1960. The sit-in, an act of civil disobedience, aroused sympathy among moderates and uninvolved individuals. African Americans (later joined by white activists) would go to segregated lunch counters.