Civil Rights Era
Section 5
The Birmingham Desegregation Campaign
After the victories of the sit-ins and freedom rides, desegregation battles were waged across the South. In 1963 alone, over a thousand desegregation protests had occurred across the region in more than a hundred cities. One of the most significant desegregation campaigns took place in Birmingham, Alabama. For decades, Birmingham had represented the citadel of white supremacy. No black resident was ever secure from the wide sweep of racist terrorism, both institutionalized and vigilante. Conditions in the state had become even worse with the election of Governor George Wallace in 1962, who stated, upon taking his oath of office, "I say segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever." Wallace vowed that the federal government would not dictate racial policies in his state. For years, civil rights activists had conceived of plans for attacking Birmingham’s Jim Crow laws; now it seemed the utmost priority.
A 17-year-old boy, who refuses to yield to the city ordinance that denied city residents the right to public parades, is attacked by police dogs in Birmingham, Alabama, May 4, 1963.
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In May 1962, the Reverend Fred Shuttlesworth convinced other civil rights leaders that the time to tackle the most segregated city in the nation had arrived. On April 3, 1963, the desegregation campaign began. Sit-ins were held at department stores and restaurants. On Good Friday the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Ralph Abernathy were arrested; marchers on Easter Sunday were brutally beaten and taken into custody. From his jail cell, King responded to white ministers’ attack on his use of civil disobedience in what became known as the "Letter from a Birmingham Jail." In the moving manuscript, King insisted that "I submit then an individual who breaks a law that conscience tells him is unjust and willingly accepts the penalty by staying in jail to arouse the conscience of the community over its injustice, is in reality expressing the very highest respect for the law."
On May 2, 1963, thousands of children and teenagers peacefully marched down the streets of Birmingham to protest the city's segregation ordinances.
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On May 2, James Bevel coordinated a children’s march involving 6,000 black youngsters and teenagers, ranging from the age of six to 16. On national television cameras, Birmingham police, following the orders of police chief Eugene "Bull" Conner, let loose vicious police dogs on children as they knelt to pray. Police used fire hoses, dogs, and clubs against pregnant women, children, and the elderly. Over 900 children were arrested and jailed. Around the world, humanity was repulsed by the sickening spectacle.
During desegregation protests in 1963, city officials, at the order of the police commissioner Eugene "Bull" Conner, used fire hoses and clubs on un-armed, nonviolent protesters.
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Protests were mounting across the country, demanding that the Kennedy administration resolve the situation in Birmingham. One hundred thousand people marched in San Francisco and thousands more demonstrated in Detroit to express solidarity with the Birmingham freedom fighters. Thousands who had previously not been involved with the civil rights movement, including teachers, lawyers, elected officials, and the clergy, were recruited into the cause, shocked by the images of police brutality and terror inflicted on unarmed peaceful protestors. As bombs exploded throughout the city, members of Congress insisted that the Justice Department intervene in the crisis. Finally, after the brutal beatings and arrests of the children’s march, the Kennedy Administration took action. On May 10, 1963, the government reached an agreement that included the release of all prisoners and a requirement that local businesses hire on a "nondiscriminatory basis." The Birmingham campaign had been successful.
Related Resources
The Birmingham riots. Blacks are treated violently by police, who open fire hydrants and spray demonstrators, as they make arrests, May 15, 1963
"Oh Freedom." With roots in slave spirituals, blues and gospel, the freedom songs of the Civil Rights Movement emerged as a tool for mobilizing and organizing people for protest. "Oh Freedom" became a quintessential symbol for the 1964 Freedom Summer.
Play audio | Download mp3 file (3.0 MB)
"We Shall Overcome." A traditional spiritual, "We Shall Overcome," was utilized as a song to protest racism and segregation.
Play audio | Download mp3 file (2.9 MB)
Martin Luther King Jr., "Letter From a Birmingham Jail," April 16, 1963, reproduced at the web site of the King Papers Project
George Wallace, Governor's Inauguration Speech, delivered Jan. 14, 1963
John F. Kennedy, "Radio and Television Report to the American People on Civil Rights"
"We Shall Overcome" [lyrics of a traditional song]
Ted Coleman, "Birmingham's Use of Dogs, Hoses on Marchers Termed Inhuman," Chicago Daily Defender (Daily Edition), May 8, 1963, p 4
"Racists Bomb Birmingham Church, 6 Kids Die," Chicago Daily Defender (Daily Edition), Sep 16, 1963, p A3