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Freedom Rides: The Civil Rights Movement

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The Freedom Rides were a political protest against segregation in the southern United States by student activists made up of black and white students. There were 7 African Americans and 6 whites which left Washington D.C., on May 4th, 1961 on two buses that were headed to New Orleans, Louisiana. They wanted to test the United States Supreme Court decision in Boynton v. Virginia which extended an earlier ruling by the Supreme Court in 1946, which banned segregation in interstate bus travel to include bus terminals, restrooms, and other facilities that were associated with interstate bus travel. The Freedom Riders felt convinced that the segregationists in the south would act violently towards their non-violent protest to exercise their constitutional …show more content…

Martin Luther King at Dr. Harris's house and they talked about different philosophies and strategies and were the movement was headed after that terrible night at the church in Montgomery, Alabama. The Freedom Rides were a key moment in history for the modern "Civil Rights Movement" which helped pave a way for future events like the Freedom Summer, the further advancement of the Student Non Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) which played a fundamental role in the development of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party. The Freedom Rides showed that non violence worked and at the same time did not address all the concerns and social injustices that were still prevalent in the black communities. This event paved the way for looking at different strategies that could help further the cause of the Civil Rights Movement. In the coming years SNCC would take on a more militant approach which was much more in line with the great civil rights leader Malcom X and his philosophy of Black Power. Malcom X created an ideological basis for the black power philosophy with his constant demand for being self-sufficient and having "Black …show more content…

This also involved getting organized help from the SNCC which would later take a more militant approach to the civil rights movement. The MFDP was not as successful as was hoped for and this led to SNCC feeling that this was a turning point in the civil rights movement and they would need to take a different direction to try and solve the many injustices that were still prevalent in the black community. While many of the non violent approaches were successful in the beginning of the civil rights movement and in great part due to Dr, Martin Luther King's philosophy of non violence, there was still much more that needed to be done to address the economic and social injustices that remained in American society for African Americans. This is when the Black Power Movement started to take hold for many African Americans. The Freedom Rides, Freedom Summer, the Student Non Violent Coordinating Committee, and the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party had all laid down a foundation for the Black Power Movement to take hold and prosper. It also helped form some strategies that would later be used successfully by the Black Power Movement that was unsuccessful with the non militant approach and doctrine that was emphasized by the late and great Dr. Martin Luther

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