When thinking of the Civil Rights Movement, for many of us, it seems like it was a thousand years ago, but for many, the memory and pain is still fresh, and it seems like yesterday. When thinking of this movement, we often think of Martin Luther King Jr., Rosa Park, and Malcom X, when there were so many others fighting and key to the movement. Ella Baker had a deep sense of family, which translated into her philosophy.
Like most African American citizens of her time, Ella Baker had close relatives that remember the “Slavery Days”, which helped to form Ella and her views. Chapter one focuses on the sense of community that Ella had around her and how it shaped her. She reflects on her grandparents, their heritage, and their stories. It was not
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Ella reflects about how her lineage is full of relationships like this. She talks specifically and in depth of her grandmother, Bet Ross, who was the daughter of her master and an octoroon, “a slave with many more black than white ancestors” (pg. 11). Her Grandmother was key to Baker’s ideals that set her apart from many of the other leaders of this time. She passed along these stories of her grandparents to show where she, like many other black Americans, draw their strength and perseverance from (pg. 12). Baker’s family, unlike most freed slaves at the time, owned land. In this period, land was crucial as it was a very agricultural forward society. With this land, it allowed her family to be better off and educated. The Civil Rights Movement was not just about being accepted as equals in society, but it was also a way for the groups that this movement inflicted to better themselves, their futures, work through the trauma and hardships of their past, and ultimately have a better life. Ella’s family was already marginally …show more content…
From that point on, her life and philosophy really began to take on a clearer picture. She began to spread her philosophy and ideas through media such as newspapers, journals, and books. She joined the YNCL and eventually became the director. YNCL helped to empower African Americans across the nation, along with giving Baker and outlet for her work and ideals (pg. 36). Baker continued to found and join clubs and organizations that provided a safe place for folks in the community to meet, exchange ideas, better educate themselves, and ultimately building a deep and large network of individuals. Baker focused on individuals, personal relationships. This allowed her to have deep and meaningful connections that would help her along her journey. Some of the other clubs/organizations include: Adult Education Committee, Mothers in the Park, and Workers’ Education Program that was a part of the Workers Progress Administration. With all of these different groups pulling from different demographics, she was able to spread her leadings and teachings to a vast
As Angela Davis states in her autobiography, “For my family, my strength, For my comrades, my light. For the sisters and brothers whose fighting spirit was my liberator. For those whose humanity is too rare to be destroyed by walls, bars, and death houses. And especially for those who are going to struggle until racism and class injustice are forever banished from our history.” This quote shows you what kind of miraculous person Angela Davis is and how she felt about this time period.
Ransby wrote about the complexity of Ella Baker's life. Ransby stated: "for me, in looking back as Baker's life in all of its rich complexity" (Ransby, Pg). In the writing the biography, Ransby brought to life a person in her writing. Her argument centered on the idea of complexity. The complexity of Baker's life leads to the importance of her legacy.
Her family fought to try to receive equal education for her and her siblings, but it did not work. Not only did she grow up going to an all-black school, but she also worked in an all blacks school when she got older. She made sure to teach all of her students about civil rights. She also taught them that they should, and need to stand up for what they believe in if they ever want to make a change. What she educated her kids on was also some of what she wanted to teach the public with her
Reba McEntire Although, Reba has had the awards, fame, and glory she as well had divorce and all the hardships of being famous. Reba’s fans have supported her all the way. They have had a positive influence on her career through the years.
1964, she helped establish the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party (MFDP) as a substitute to the all-white Mississippi Democratic Party. She worked as the coordinator of the Washington office of the MFDP and attended a delegation of the MFDP to the National Democratic Party convention in Atlantic City, New Jersey. The group’s purpose was to challenge the national party to sustain the rights of African Americans to partake in party elections in the South
Ella Baker and the Civil Rights Movement Ella Baker was a Civil Rights Activist and fought for a lot of women rights but unlike a lot of other Activists she has never been to jail. Baker was committed to economic justice for all people and once stated “People cannot be free until there is enough work in this land to give everybody a job” (EllaBakerCenter.org). She was in many organizations where they would talk about what they could change and what they could make different for both black and white people. In 1930 she joined an organization called “Young Negroes Cooperative League” the whole point of the organization was to help “develop black economic power through collective planning” (EllaBakerCenter.org). Baker's childhood was calm
Loretta Lynn, affectionately known as the Coal Miner’s Daughter has had an astonishing career spanning well towards its sixth decade. The rags to riches story has brought us one of country music’s biggest legends, most beloved artist, and over 50 years of solid country music. Recently Lynn was honored when she received the Lifetime Achievement Award For Songwriting at the Americana Music Awards on September 17, 2014 held at the Ryman Auditorium, once home to the iconic Grand Ole Opry. 54 years to the day Lynn first walked onto the stage and made her debut playing her first hit single, Honky Tonk Girl.
The purpose of this paper was to discuss the impact that Mamie Till had on the Civil Rights Movement. Mamie had a huge impact on the Civil Rights Movement by essentially starting it. She used her son’s brutal death and beating to essentially start the Civil Rights Movement. She also would use her issue to united a lot of people, and combine many small movements into a large national and international movement. Finally she would also impact the Civil Rights Movement by inspiring many leaders including Rosa Parks, and Martin Luther King Jr..
Martin Luther King Jr. Her work has had a lasting impact on the civil rights movement and her legacy continues to be celebrated in modern times. She is an inspiration to many, especially African-American women, and her work is still relevant today. Her efforts to fight for equal rights and justice, and her commitment to empowering others, are just as important now as they were during her lifetime. Ella Baker’s work is a reminder that all people, regardless of race, gender, or religion, should be treated equally and with
Identification and Evaluation of Sources Anne McCarty Braden, a daughter of the white South in perhaps the truest sense, was one of the greatest and most under-acknowledged civil rights activists of the 1950s and 60s. The reporter represented a changing view in the South towards segregation and social revolution beyond her time. How did Anne Braden’s perspective as a white, southern woman affect her role in the Civil Rights movement?
After high school, she entered college where she had the courage to challenge the rules and became a leader of the people of color through her actions and beliefs, becoming an activist in the civil rights movement in Mississippi and working hard as a civil rights activist for the Congress of Racial Equality throughout the country. When she could longer see that anything was being done by her work in the civil rights movement, she left. Anne realized that the fight for human rights, dignity, justice, equality, and freedom is not just the fight of the Black people, but the fight of every ethnic and racial minority. Anne also recognized that social issues like gender and class are just as essential as that of race. Annes mission in life was to become a civil rights activist and she did this though hard work and
As Ransby states, she was “also passionately committed to a broader humanitarian struggle for a better world.” (5) A visionist, Baker believed this transformation could only occur through a “democratic, cooperative, and localized movement that valued the participation of each of its individual members… [This] was the bedrock of her political vision.”
Her family also consisted of two parents that couldn’t be legally married at the time. Many slave familes had children that were born into slavery. The children were expected to grow up and work on the plantations that they were born on.
As a result, it leads her to fight for her own life in order to survive in the 1800’s. Through Dana’s experience, it helps readers understand, and realize that slavery was not an easy time in our country’s history and demonstrates
Introduction: The civil rights movement of 1954-1968 has made a huge impact on the history of African-American equality. All the great leaders of the movement have gone down in history for their courageous work and outstanding commitment to the civil rights movement. One of the most famous of the activists was Martin Luther King Junior (1929-1968) . King is still remembered today for his legendary speech entitled “I had a dream”.