Clyde Bellecourt (apex)
LeoNard Peltier was part of AIM and was not the founder of the American Indian Movement. The name of the AIM (American Indian Movement) was originally given to the movement back in 1968 by its original founding Father Dennis Banks, as he sitting in a jail cell on a wrongful arrest charge due to fighting for civil rights of the American Indian people back in 1968. Please Read the book "OJIBWA WARRIOR Dennis Banks the Rise of the American Indian Movement" By Dennis Band With Richard Erdoes and also see the DVD educational movie, It's a Good Day to Die" by Dennis Banks.
Rodolfo Gonzales
American Indian Movement
Sarah Winnemucca
The wife of Martin Luther King, Coretta as well as being an author was an activist and civil rights leader, helping in the leadership of the African - American Civil Rights Movement of the 1960's. After the assassination of her husband in 1968 she played a more prominent part in the movement and became active in the Women's Movement and LGBT.Coretta became active after her experiences of racial discrimination at school, and the Montgomery Bus Boycott (1955) thrust her into her involvement of advocating for civil rights legislation.
There were many Native American Tribes in the land that became Massachusetts. They included:AgawamNipmuckWampanoagMassachusettNarragansettNashawayNaumkeagNausetPaometPatuxetPennacookPocomtucPomkapoagSucconet
In the United States the civil rights movement that was a prominent feature in American politics and culture. It made apparent the inequalities in the USA among the races. More people became aware that in areas of the South for example, there were still laws and practices that made Blacks second class citizens. The movement also exposed the workings of the age old Ku Klux Klan for example that would burn down Afro American churches in the South. In summary, the civil rights movement did create new laws that helped Afro Americans to succeed in the USA.
It became a large water system for Indian's westward movement.
American Indian Movement
American Indian Movement
Three prominent abolitionists were Benjamin Franklin in the American colonies, who became the American Ambassador to France after the American revolution and British legislators Thomas Clarkson and William Wilberforce who were early leaders of the Abolitionist movement in England.
It was a term often used before the hyphenated term American-Indian or the term Native American became popular. A red Indian was a North American Native.
Sarah Winnemucca
Margaret Sanger
Frederick Douglass grew up a slave and became a prominent philosopher in the abolitionist movement because of his powerful writings and speeches.
Langston Hughes acquired fame during the Harlem Renaissance era in the 1920s and 1930s. He was a prominent figure in the cultural and artistic movement that celebrated African American identity and creativity. His works, such as poems, essays, and plays, became influential in shaping African American literature and identity.
Billy Sunday was an American evangelist and former professional baseball player who became a prominent figure in the revivalist movement during the early 20th century. He was known for his fiery preaching style and his ability to draw large crowds to his revivals.
Lizette Woodworth Reese was an American poetess who became prominent during the 1920's and has been compared to Emily Dickinson.
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