Civil Rights - New World A’Comin | 1

Civil Rights - New World A’Comin | 1

Up next

Civil Rights - Strides Towards Freedom | 2

In 1896, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that segregation was legal, on a “separate but equal” basis. But for more than five decades, life for black and white Americans was seldom equal, but always separate.To fight segregation, the NAACP and others exposed the dismal and debasing c ...  Show more

Civil Rights - Jim Crow Fights Back | 3

After the Brown V. Board of Education ruling, civil rights activists had legal standing to desegregate schools. But doing so proved dangerous. The first black students to step into newly integrated schools faced extreme hostility from whites who felt Jim Crow society was under at ...  Show more

Recommended Episodes

Juneteenth and the Constitution
We the People

On June 19, 1865, Union soldiers, led by Major General Gordon Granger, arrived in Galveston, Texas, with news that the Civil War had ended and that the enslaved were now free. President Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation had been issued over two years earlier, and the South had ...  Show more

61: The Louisiana Native Guard, the 54th Massachusetts & On: Black Soldiers in the Civil War
History That Doesn't Suck

“It is hard to believe that Southern soldiers—and Texans at that—have been whipped by a mongrel crew of white and black Yankees … there must be some mistake.”This is the story of Black Soldiers in the Civil War.Black patriots are ready to fight from day one. The Lincoln Administr ...  Show more

SYMHC Classics: Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation
Stuff You Missed in History Class

In 2016, Secretary of Education Dr. John B. King Jr. joined Tracy to discuss the Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation, which gave rebelling states 100 days to return to the Union or have their enslaved population freed during the U.S. Civil War.See omnystudio.com/listener for pr ...  Show more

What is Juneteenth, and why is it important? | Karlos Hill and Soraya Field Fiorio
TED Talks Daily

At the end of the Civil War, though slavery was technically illegal in all states, it still persisted in the last bastions of the Confederacy. This was the case when Union General Gordon Granger marched his troops into Galveston, Texas on June 19th and announced that all enslaved ...  Show more