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dc.contributor.advisorChamberlain, Oscar B.
dc.contributor.authorHenderson, Lucas
dc.date.accessioned2016-09-30T16:27:21Z
dc.date.available2016-09-30T16:27:21Z
dc.date.issued2016-09-30T16:27:21Z
dc.identifier.urihttp://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/75360
dc.description.abstractIn the early 1960s, two contrasting civil rights protests made very different impacts on the Civil Rights Movement as a whole. The Albany Movement, from 1961-1962, was a drawn-out campaign that struggled mightily to prevail against a pragmatic tactician while spreading activists too thin in their strategies. The Birmingham Campaign, in 1963, resulted in a violent reaction by a short-tempered white lawman, which in turn brought about a call to action by John F. Kennedy, sowing the seeds for Lyndon B. Johnson’s Civil Rights Act in 1964. One campaign kept the Civil Rights Movement at essentially a standstill, and the other gave the Movement momentum it needed to make a massive turnaround. However, I will be seeing how the two are actually more connected than one might originally assume, by analyzing the two movements side by side in an attempt to make a correlation.en
dc.language.isoen_USen
dc.rightsCopyright of the authoren
dc.subjectCivil rights movements--Alabama--Birmingham--History--20th centuryen
dc.subjectCivil Rights Movement -- History -- 20th centuryen
dc.subjectAlbany Movement (Albany, Ga.)en
dc.titleSimilarities Through Differences: A Look at the Correlation Between Two Radically Different Civil Rights Campaigns in Albany and Birminghamen
dc.typeThesisen


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