Fiche de révision : 1960s Civil Rights and Cold War

📋 Course Outline

  1. Late 1960s America
  2. Civil Rights Movement origins
  3. Segregation and Jim Crow laws
  4. NAACP and Brown v Topeka
  5. Civil rights leaders and protests
  6. Vietnam War escalation
  7. Antiwar protests and Tet Offensive
  8. Vietnamization and U.S. withdrawal
  9. Détente and nuclear arms control
  10. The Space Race and Apollo program

📖 1. Late 1960s America

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Civil rights movement peak : A period when the civil rights movement reached its highest intensity in the 1960s, with major pressure on segregation and voting rights.
  • Ku Klux Klan resurgence : A period when the Ku Klux Klan gained new membership after media and social backlash, fueling violent attacks and intimidation.
  • Great Migration : A movement of many African Americans from the South to northern states to escape violence and racism while still facing discrimination there.
  • Black Power Movement : A movement that pushed racial pride and economic independence and sometimes supported violence in response to systemic racism.

📝 Essential Points

  • In the late 1960s, the civil rights movement shifted toward a more radical tone after years of fighting segregation, disenfranchisement, and violence.
  • Martin Luther King Jr was assassinated on 4 April 1968 on his hotel balcony in Memphis.
  • Malcolm X had been assassinated in February 1965, and by 1966 three men convicted of his murder were sentenced to life imprisonment.
  • The late 1960s included large, direct-action protests such as 54-mile marches from Selma to Montgomery in March 1965 to pressure voting-rights changes.
  • Many African Americans moved north during the Great Migration to escape violence, settling in places such as Illinois, Michigan, and New York.
  • By the mid-1920s, the Ku Klux Klan had about 5 million members, and it used violence against Black people and other targeted groups.

💡 Memory Hook

Late 60s = peak civil rights + radical shift, with MLK (4/4/1968) and the Black Power challenge after.

📖 2. Civil Rights Movement origins

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Reconstruction era : The Reconstruction era was the period after the American Civil War when slavery ended and major political rights for formerly enslaved Black Americans were legally expanded.
  • Jim Crow laws : Jim Crow laws were state segregation rules that enforced unequal treatment of Black people, denying basic rights through discrimination in many public settings.
  • Separate but equal : Separate but equal was the Supreme Court-approved idea that segregation was constitutional if facilities for Black and white people were supposedly of equal quality.
  • Ku Klux Klan : The Ku Klux Klan was a white supremacist group that carried out secret racist terror and violence, targeting Black people and other groups.

📝 Essential Points

  • The Civil War ended in 1865, and Reconstruction followed, abolishing slavery and granting emancipated Black Americans citizenship with Black men allowed to vote.
  • Jim Crow segregation became widespread, including separate facilities such as schools, waiting rooms, public transport, libraries, and cinemas.
  • The KKK was formed in 1865 with secret membership and leaders called the Grand Wizard, and it carried out attacks including tar-and-feathering, assaults, and lynching.
  • In 1870–1871, the federal government passed the Enforcement Acts to prevent and prosecute crimes committed by KKK members, reducing the Klan’s power for years.
  • In 1921, the Emergency Quota Act limited legal immigration, while the mid-1920s saw the KKK reach about 5 million members and the Great Migration move many Black Americans north.
  • In 1896, a Supreme Court ruling endorsed separate but equal, allowing segregation as long as the facilities were claimed to be equal quality.

💡 Memory Hook

KKK + “Grand Wizard” = secret white-supremacist terror; “separate but equal” = the legal excuse for segregation that was never truly equal.

📖 3. Segregation and Jim Crow laws

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Brown v Topeka : A landmark Supreme Court case that challenged racial segregation in schools and helped push the end of school segregation.
  • Segregated schools : School systems where Black and white students were kept separate by law, treating them as unequal in practice.

📝 Essential Points

  • The Supreme Court ruled in Brown v Topeka that segregation in schools must end immediately, even though some southern states reacted with anger and resentment.
  • Brown v Topeka was a landmark for showing the Supreme Court would act to dismantle segregation in America.
  • Southern segregation faced resistance in 1957 when nine Black students entered a Little Rock, Arkansas, school set aside for white children and needed military protection.
  • Support for ending school segregation came from President Eisenhower and later Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson.

💡 Memory Hook

Brown = schools unequal → segregation must end immediately; support: Eisenhower through Johnson.

📖 4. NAACP and Brown v Topeka

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • NAACP : NAACP is a U.S. civil rights organization founded in 1909 to promote justice for African Americans through interracial efforts.
  • Brown v Board of Education : Brown v Board of Education is a Supreme Court case that challenged school segregation by ruling that segregated schools are unequal.

📝 Essential Points

  • In 1951, a group of Black Kansas parents sued to challenge laws preventing their children from attending school with white peers.
  • In 1954, the Supreme Court ruled that segregated schools are unequal in the Brown v Board of Education decision.
  • The source links Brown v Board of Education to a broader fight against racist segregation laws across the United States.
  • After Brown, the school desegregation issue continued to trigger violent opposition, including the need for military protection in Little Rock in 1957.

💡 Memory Hook

1951 parents sue in Kansas; 1954 Court says segregation = inequality.

📖 5. Civil rights leaders and protests

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Martin Luther King Jr. assassination : The assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. acted as a trigger for major civil rights legislation in 1968.
  • Fair Housing Act : The Fair Housing Act is a civil rights law that prohibits race-based discrimination in buying or renting homes.
  • Loving v. Virginia : Loving v. Virginia is a Supreme Court case that struck down laws banning interracial marriage.

📝 Essential Points

  • In the late 1960s, Congress passed a civil rights law that banned literacy tests and blocked requirements that prevented Black Americans from voting.
  • President Johnson signed a further Civil Rights Act one week after Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination in 1968.
  • The 1968 Fair Housing Act barred discrimination in owning or renting homes based on race.
  • The Supreme Court ruled in Loving v. Virginia that interracial marriage laws were unconstitutional and struck down segregation in public transport.
  • Civil-rights progress included repeated pro–civil rights Supreme Court decisions beyond housing and voting.

💡 Memory Hook

King’s death→swift Johnson civil-rights push; “Loving” = loving is legal across races.

📖 6. Vietnam War escalation

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Gulf of Tonkin incident : A set of clashes in the Gulf of Tonkin used to justify U.S. strikes against North Vietnam under President Lyndon Johnson.
  • Operation Rolling Thunder : A sustained U.S. bombing campaign launched in 1965 against targets in North Vietnam under the Johnson administration.
  • Napalm authorization : A decision allowing napalm use in U.S. bombing runs in Vietnam during the escalation phase.
  • Gradual escalation and attrition : A strategy that aimed to wear down communist forces by steadily increasing pressure rather than directly taking territory.

📝 Essential Points

  • In August 1964, North Vietnamese torpedo boats attacked a U.S. destroyer in the Gulf of Tonkin, and Johnson used a second disputed clash to justify air strikes on northern naval bases.
  • By the end of 1964, U.S. military advisers in Vietnam had risen to 23,000, up from 800 in the 1950s.
  • In February 1965, the U.S. launched Operation Rolling Thunder against targets in North Vietnam.
  • In February–July 1965, Johnson authorized napalm for bombing runs while the U.S. announced a deployment of 100,000 soldiers.
  • From 1965 to 1967, U.S. strategy emphasized gradual escalation and attrition to destroy communist fighting capacity rather than taking territory.
  • Major battles during the escalating war period included fighting near Danang and Ia Drang.

💡 Memory Hook

Tonkin justifies strikes → Rolling Thunder bombs → napalm authorized → troop surge to 100,000.

📖 7. Antiwar protests and Tet Offensive

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Counterculture youth : Counterculture youth were among the groups that felt the postwar lifestyle increasingly exhausted, even as material goals were reached.
  • Teach-in : A teach-in was a campus event where people organized open discussions, which became a popular antiwar protest form in 1965.
  • Credibility gap : The credibility gap was the perceived mismatch between promised progress and the actual reality of the Vietnam conflict.
  • Tet offensive : The Tet offensive was a coordinated 1968 attack by North Vietnamese and Vietcong forces across South Vietnam.

📝 Essential Points

  • A January 31, 1968 Tet offensive involved attacks on 36 provincial capitals and five of six major cities, including a penetration of the U.S. embassy compound in Saigon.
  • Tet was a military disaster for the Viet Cong but a propaganda victory that intensified U.S. antiwar sentiment and doubts about whether the war could be won.
  • In March 1968, political support for President Johnson weakened as reports spread of General William Westmoreland requesting 206,000 more troops.
  • In 1965, William Sewell organized a well-attended Madison teach-in, and antiwar protests later included 15,000 in Washington and 35,000 in November.

💡 Memory Hook

Tet: battlefield loss but media win—propaganda flips American opinion against the war.

📖 8. Vietnamization and U.S. withdrawal

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Vietnamization : Vietnamization was a Nixon policy to train and equip South Vietnamese forces so the U.S. could cut troop numbers while maintaining credibility.
  • U.S. withdrawal strategy : U.S. withdrawal strategy was the plan under Nixon to reduce American ground combat presence and end direct U.S. fighting in Vietnam.
  • Cambodia bombings : Cambodia bombings were Nixon-era air attacks on Viet Cong strongholds in Cambodia intended to disrupt enemy operations.
  • Paris peace agreement : The Paris peace agreement was the January 1973 deal that set terms for a U.S. departure and South Vietnam self-determination.

📝 Essential Points

  • In June 1969, Nixon announced Vietnamization to train and equip South Vietnam’s military so U.S. troop levels could be reduced.
  • Over the following three years, more than 500,000 American soldiers were withdrawn, worsening already-low troop morale and increasing desertion and drug abuse.
  • Nixon extended U.S. involvement with an April 30 Cambodia invasion announced by him, alongside earlier secret bombing of Viet Cong strongholds in Cambodia.
  • A 1972 eight-day U.S. bombing campaign targeting Hanoi came during difficult Paris talks starting in 1969, leading to a peace deal in January 1973.
  • Under the agreement, U.S. forces left Vietnam and South Vietnam gained the right to determine its own future in 1973.
  • In 1973, the last American combat troops left Vietnam, with roughly 58,000 U.S. deaths during the war’s course.

💡 Memory Hook

Vietnamization: “Vietnam trains, U.S. exits” — June 1969 plan leading to troop withdrawals and the January 1973 Paris deal.

📖 9. Détente and nuclear arms control

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Détente : Détente is the relaxation of tense Cold War relations, especially through direct communication between the United States and the Soviet Union.
  • Red telephone hotline : The red telephone hotline is a direct communications link set up after the Cuban Missile Crisis between Washington and Moscow to reduce escalation risk.
  • Outer Space Treaty 1967 : The Outer Space Treaty is a UN-negotiated multilateral treaty that set key principles for outer space activity and entered into force on 10 October 1967.
  • Treaty on Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons : The NPT is a 1968 treaty designed to stop the spread of nuclear weapons while encouraging peaceful uses of nuclear energy.

📝 Essential Points

  • The Cuban Missile Crisis (1962) helped push both superpowers to agree to a Washington–Moscow hotline to prevent conflict escalation.
  • Foundations of détente before Nixon included the January 1967 Outer Space Treaty and the July 1968 NPT.
  • SALT I was signed in 1972 after the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks began with efforts to limit both superpowers’ nuclear capabilities.
  • SALT I became outdated due to the development of MIRVs, and SALT II talks began in 1972.
  • In 1972, the Biological Weapons Convention and the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty were also concluded.
  • In January 1973, peace-related negotiations after the Washington Summit produced continued diplomatic progress toward nuclear limitation discussions.

💡 Memory Hook

Détente after 1962 means “talk fast”: hotline + treaties start with space (1967) then nuclear restraint (NPT 1968).

📖 10. The Space Race and Apollo program

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • NASA : NASA is the U.S. agency created to drive space exploration and coordinate major space efforts during the Space Race.
  • Outer Space Treaty : The Outer Space Treaty is a UN-negotiated multilateral agreement that sets core principles for state activities in outer space, including the Moon.

📝 Essential Points

  • NASA expanded space investment from 1962–1967, doubling space-dedicated scientists and engineers and raising outlays to $60 million per year.
  • Apollo development relied on stepwise U.S. programs: Mercury (suborbital May 5, 1961; first Earth orbit Feb. 20, 1962) and Gemini (10 two-person missions).
  • Apollo 8 was the first lunar orbital mission, and Apollo 10 demonstrated the possibility of reaching the moon and returning.
  • Apollo 11 landed on July 16, 1969 with Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins, and Buzz Aldrin, and an estimated 530 million people watched the televised landing and heard Armstrong.
  • The Outer Space Treaty was opened for signature on 27 January 1967 and entered into force on 10 October 1967; as of March 2024 it had 115 parties and 22 signatories.

💡 Memory Hook

Step-ladder: Mercury then Gemini, then Apollo 8-orbit and Apollo 11-land (July 16, 1969).

📅 Key Dates

DateEvent
1865American Civil War ends; Reconstruction era begins
1896Supreme Court ruling endorses ‘separate but equal’
1909NAACP is set up
1951Oliver Brown and the NAACP take legal action against Topeka Board of Education
1954Supreme Court rules segregated schools are unequal in Brown v Topeka
1957Little Rock: nine Black students enter a school for white children and need military protection
March 7, 1965Selma civil rights march is attacked at Edmund Pettus Bridge
4 April 1968Martin Luther King Jr. is assassinated on his hotel balcony
January 31, 1968Tet offensive begins with attacks across South Vietnam
June 1969Nixon announces ‘Vietnamization’

📊 Synthesis Tables

Civil rights laws passed by LBJ

YearLawWhat it bans
1964Civil Rights Act of 1964Discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin; discrimination in the workplace; segregation in public spaces such as parks and cinemas
1965Voting Rights ActDiscrimination preventing Black Americans from voting; bans the requirement for a literacy test
1968Civil Rights Act (Fair Housing Act)Discrimination in owning or renting houses based on race

⚠️ Common Pitfalls & Confusions

  1. Confusing “separate but equal” (1896) with Brown v Topeka (1954), which overturns it for schools.
  2. Mixing up MLK’s assassination date (4 April 1968) with Tet’s start (31 January 1968).
  3. Believing Tet was a military success for the Viet Cong; the source says it was a military disaster but a propaganda victory.
  4. Thinking Vietnamization was an instant U.S. withdrawal; the source ties it to training/equipping so troop numbers could be reduced over time.
  5. Assuming the Outer Space Treaty is a nuclear arms treaty; the source presents it as space-principles law, while NPT is the nuclear one.
  6. Swapping the Gulf of Tonkin justification timing with Operation Rolling Thunder: Tonkin is August 1964, Rolling Thunder is February 1965.
  7. Assuming the KKK declined smoothly after 1871; the source says it later re-emerged (including after “The Birth of a Nation”).

✅ Exam Checklist

  1. Explain what the Civil War’s end (1865) and the Reconstruction era changed for slavery, citizenship, and voting.
  2. Define Jim Crow laws and list at least three segregated spaces mentioned (e.g., schools, waiting rooms, public transport).
  3. State what ‘separate but equal’ meant and identify the role of the 1896 Supreme Court ruling.
  4. Describe the NAACP’s founding purpose in 1909 and what legal strategy it used (funding legal representation and later challenging segregation).
  5. Summarize Brown v Topeka: what the Court decided about segregated schools and that segregation should end immediately.
  6. Give three key civil-rights protest events in order: March on Washington (1963), Selma marches (March 7, 1965 and March 21), and Little Rock (1957).
  7. Identify what Johnson signed after MLK’s assassination and match each year-law to its target (Civil Rights Act 1964, Voting Rights Act 1965, Fair Housing Act 1968).
  8. Outline the Vietnam War timeline in the source: Gulf of Tonkin (August 1964), Operation Rolling Thunder (February 1965), Tet offensive (31 January 1968), and the Paris peace deal (January 1973).
  9. Define Vietnamization and connect it to Nixon’s June 1969 announcement and later U.S. troop withdrawals and reduced direct combat.
  10. Describe détente: include the Washington–Moscow hotline after the Cuban Missile Crisis and name two détente foundations (Outer Space Treaty 1967 and NPT 1968).
  11. For the Space Race, order Mercury then Gemini then Apollo steps, and state the key Apollo landing date (July 16, 1969) and what was broadcast.
  12. Connect late-1960s cultural-political shifts to major antiwar/counterculture events, especially Madison teach-in (April 1, 1965) and Woodstock (August 15 to 18, 1969).

Testez vos connaissances

Testez vos connaissances sur 1960s Civil Rights and Cold War avec 20 questions à choix multiples avec corrections détaillées.

1. What best describes the late 1960s shift in the American civil rights struggle?

2. Which event is associated with the late 1960s civil rights peak and became a major symbol of the period?

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Révisez avec les flashcards

Mémorisez les concepts clés de 1960s Civil Rights and Cold War avec 20 flashcards interactives.

Late 1960s America — key features?

Peak civil rights, radical shifts, MLK assassination.

Civil Rights Movement origins — era?

Post-Civil War Reconstruction period.

Jim Crow laws — purpose?

Enforced racial segregation and discrimination.

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