summer of 1961
The Freedom Riders were activists who were determined to protest the segregationists policies of the deep South.
They were trying to show everybody that blacks and whites were equal in a peaceful way. They didn't want to cause any harm by doing this but it ended in violence and death.
Integration...
The Freedom Riders were groups of people who rode buses south to protest segregation of the bus station. They were both blacks and whites.
Freedom Riders were Civil Rights activists, mostly young, white and black, and from the northern states, who took "Freedom Rides" on buses into the southern states in order to test the Supreme Court case of Boyton v. Virginia, which proclaimed that racial segregation in restaurants and waiting rooms in bus and train stations, was unconstitutional. The first Freedom Ride left Washington D.C. in May 1961. Later Freedom Riders went into the most segregated areas of the South in attempts to get Blacks living there to register to vote. Wikipedia has an article on Freedom Riders.
the freedom riders
Freedom rides
The Kennedy administration supported the Freedom Riders' right to protest nonviolently against segregation on interstate buses. They intervened to protect the Freedom Riders when they faced violent attacks in the South and enforced federal laws to ensure their safety. The administration also ordered the Interstate Commerce Commission to ban segregation in bus and train stations in response to the Freedom Riders' efforts.
The Freedom Riders were activists who were determined to protest the segregationists policies of the deep South.
They were trying to show everybody that blacks and whites were equal in a peaceful way. They didn't want to cause any harm by doing this but it ended in violence and death.
Integration...
The Freedom Riders were groups of people who rode buses south to protest segregation of the bus station. They were both blacks and whites.
Freedom riders were people who went South to break up segregation in public transportation, voter registration and segregated education. Today people of any race can vote and education is no longer segregated.
A group of northern idealists active in the civil rights movement, who included both blacks and whites. They rode buses into the South in the early 1960s in order to challenge racial segregation. They were regularly attacked by mobs of angry whites and received often belated protection from federal officers.
Freedom Riders were Civil Rights activists, mostly young, white and black, and from the northern states, who took "Freedom Rides" on buses into the southern states in order to test the Supreme Court case of Boyton v. Virginia, which proclaimed that racial segregation in restaurants and waiting rooms in bus and train stations, was unconstitutional. The first Freedom Ride left Washington D.C. in May 1961. Later Freedom Riders went into the most segregated areas of the South in attempts to get Blacks living there to register to vote. Wikipedia has an article on Freedom Riders.
The Freedom Riders's goal was to challenge the Jim Crow laws of the South. The original movement began with a group of 40 individuals who boarded buses in Washington DC. They planned to travel throughout the South, eventually ending up in New Orleans. They were stopped and met with resistance in Alabama.
Freedom Riders were a group of northern and southern civil rights activists who sought to end racial segregation on interstate transportation, such as buses. They traveled in buses, blacks and whites together, throughout the South where they met resistance, ridicule and violence - at times, their buses were torched, they were attacked with clubs and generally harrassed.