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Progress in the civil rights movement

In the late 1950s, the foundations had been laid for progress in black civil rights. The Montgomery Bus Boycott was particularly important because:

  • it led to other bus boycotts, such as in Florida in 1956
  • it encouraged other forms of protest, such as a boycott of businesses owned by white people in Tuskegee, Alabama, in 1957
  • it led to the formation of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference , which brought southern civil rights together to coordinate their actions
A photograph of a very quiet food store with one cashier and one customer
Image caption,
An almost empty food store during a boycott in Tuskegee, Alabama, in 1957

The Southern Christian Leadership Conference

The SCLC was established in 1957 and was selected as its leader. The organisation was made up of a range of religious leaders, who supported the idea of using non-violent resistance and protest to bring about change. Early actions of the SCLC included:

  • the Prayer Pilgrimage for Freedom in 1957, which pressured the president to speak out against segregation
  • an attempt to increase black voter registration, called the Crusade for Citizenship
  • the establishment of ‘movement centres’ in the South to coordinate the actions of black church communities fighting segregation

The 1957 Civil Rights Act

Due to pressure from civil rights organisations and a desire to appeal to black voters, President Dwight D Eisenhower gave his support to moves to improve civil rights. A was introduced in 1956 to improve access to voting for black Americans. The initial proposal was:

  • to give the strong powers to enforce black voting rights using military force if required
  • to allow the courts to decide on cases where black people had been blocked from voting

However, opposition from southern politicians, such as the Strom Thurmond, stopped the bill from passing through .

In 1957 another bill was introduced. Again, opposition was strong, and the eventual Civil Rights Act introduced much weaker measures than had originally been intended. A was set up to investigate why black Americans were being prevented from voting, and federal courts were given powers to prosecute states that tried to prevent black Americans from voting.

The everyday experience of black Americans did not change significantly as a result of the 1957 Civil Rights Act. However, the act was important, not because of what it said but because it had been passed at all. Civil rights campaigners saw that their protests were being listened to and stepped up their efforts to achieve equality.