SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 40
African American/Black History
           Month

At the Crossroads of Freedom and
Equality: The Emancipation
Proclamation and the March on
Washington
African American/Black History Month

In 2013, the United States will commemorate
two events that changed the course of the
nation—the 1863 Emancipation
Proclamation and the 1963 March on
Washington.
African American/Black History Month

These milestone events in American history
were the culmination of decades of struggles
by individuals—both famous and unknown—
who believed in the American promise that
this nation was “dedicated to the proposition
that all men are created equal.”
African American/Black History Month




     Abraham Lincoln and his Emancipation Proclamation
African American/Black History Month

President Abraham Lincoln issued the
preliminary Emancipation Proclamation on
September 22, 1862. It stipulated that if the
Southern states did not cease their rebellion
by January 1, 1863, the Proclamation would
go into effect.
African American/Black History Month

The Emancipation Proclamation applied only
to states that had seceded from the Union,
leaving slavery untouched in the border
states. It also exempted parts of the
Confederacy that had already come under
Northern control. Most important, the
freedom it promised depended upon Union
military victory.
African American/Black History Month

Lincoln justified the Proclamation as a war
measure intended to disable the
Confederacy’s use of slaves in the war effort.
Being cautious to respect the limits of his
authority, Lincoln applied the Emancipation
Proclamation only to the Southern states in
rebellion.
African American/Black History Month
The Southern states used slaves to support
their armies on the battlefield and to care for
their homes so more men could fight.




      White officers eating while a Black servant stands behind
                     them with a pitcher of water
African American/Black History Month

Lincoln first proposed the Emancipation
Proclamation to his cabinet in the summer of
1862, and many of the cabinet secretaries were
apathetic or worried that the Proclamation
was too drastic. Lincoln’s commitment to the
necessity of the Proclamation, along with the
Union victory at Antietam, finally persuaded
his cabinet members to support him.
African American/Black History Month




         Lincoln Reading the Emancipation
         Proclamation to his Cabinet [Painting].
         Boston; Museum of Fine Arts.
African American/Black History Month
Lincoln also declared that the Proclamation
would be enforced under his power as
Commander-in-Chief, and that the freedom
of the slaves would be maintained by the
Executive government of the United States.
African American/Black History Month
Up until September 1862, the central focus of
the war had been to preserve the Union.
With the issuance of the Emancipation
Proclamation, freedom for slaves became a
legitimate war plan.
African American/Black History Month
Lincoln declared in the Proclamation that
African Americans of “suitable condition,
would be received into the armed service of
the United States.” Five months after the
Proclamation took effect, the War
Department of the United States issued
General Order No. 143, establishing the
United States Colored Troops.
African American/Black History Month
When the Confederacy did not yield, Lincoln
issued the final Emancipation Proclamation
on January 1, 1863.




      The inkwell used by Lincoln, the Proclamation draft and
                           Lincoln's pen
African American/Black History Month
By the end of the war, over 200,000 African
Americans would serve in the Union Army
and Navy.




           African-American Union Soldiers
African American/Black History Month
Although the Proclamation initially freed
only the slaves in the rebellious states, by the
end of the war the Proclamation had
influenced and prepared citizens to advocate
and accept abolition for all slaves in both the
North and South. The 13th Amendment,
which abolished slavery in the United States,
was passed on December 6, 1865.
African American/Black History Month



              Lincoln considered the
              Emancipation Proclamation
              the crowning achievement
              of his presidency.
African American/Black History Month




“I never, in my life, felt more certain that I
was doing right, than I do in signing this
paper. If my name ever goes into history it
will be for this act, and my whole soul is in it.”
African American/Black History Month
Although the Emancipation Proclamation
did not end slavery in the nation, it captured
the hearts and imaginations of millions of
Americans and fundamentally transformed
the character of the war. After January 1,
1863, every advance of federal troops
expanded the domain of freedom.
African American/Black History Month
From the first days of the Civil War, slaves
had acted to secure their own liberty. The
Emancipation Proclamation confirmed their
insistence that the war for the Union must
become a war for freedom. It added moral
force to the Union cause and strengthened
the Union both militarily and politically.
African American/Black History Month
As a milestone along the road to slavery's
final destruction, the Emancipation
Proclamation has assumed a place among
the great documents of human freedom.




            Former Slave, Sally Fickland views
            the Emancipation Proclamation, 1947
African American/Black History Month
African American/Black History Month
The March on Washington
was envisioned by A. Philip
Randolph, a long-time civil
rights activist dedicated to
improving the economic
condition of Black Americans.
When Randolph first
proposed the march in late
1962, he received little
response from other civil       A. Philip Randolph

rights leaders.
African American/Black History Month
He knew that cooperation would be difficult
among civil rights leaders because each had
his own agenda for the civil rights
movement, and the leaders competed for
funding and press coverage. He knew that
for the March on Washington to be
successful, all civil rights leaders would have
to support the event.
African American/Black History Month
The "Big Six" leaders were James Farmer, of
the Congress of Racial Equality; Martin
Luther King, Jr., of the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference; John Lewis, of the
Student Nonviolent Coordinating
Committee; A. Philip Randolph, of the
Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters; Roy
Wilkins, of the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People; and
Whitney Young, Jr., of the National Urban
League.
African American/Black History Month




    John Lewis, Whitney Young, A. Philip Randolph, Martin
    Luther King, Jr., James Farmer and Roy Wilkins met in
    March 1963 in New York City to organize the March on
    Washington.
African American/Black History Month
 The March on Washington was not
 universally embraced by civil rights
 leaders, and President John F. Kennedy
 was initially opposed to the March.
 Kennedy was concerned that the event
 might exacerbate already heightened
 racial tensions across the country and
 perhaps erode public support for the civil
 rights movement at large.
African American/Black History Month
Additionally, various influential organizations
and individuals opposed the March. Besides
the expected, such as Southern segregationists
and members of the Ku Klux Klan, the Black-
separatist group Nation of Islam and its
outspoken member Malcolm X adamantly
disagreed with the peaceful intentions of the
event. He felt it presented an inaccurate,
sanitized pageant of racial harmony and called
it the “Farce on Washington.”
African American/Black History Month
In May, at the height of the Birmingham
Campaign, King joined A. Philip Randolph,
James Farmer, and Charles McDew. After
notifying President Kennedy of their intent,
the leaders of the major civil rights
organizations set the march date for August
28th.
African American/Black History Month
The goals of the protest included:
 a comprehensive civil rights bill that would do
away with segregated public accommodations
 protection of the right to vote
 mechanisms for seeking redress of violations of
constitutional rights
 desegregation of all public schools in 1963
 federal work programs to train and place
unemployed workers
 Federal Fair Employment Practices Act barring
discrimination in all employment
African American/Black History Month
On August 28, 1963, more than 200,000
Americans gathered in Washington, D.C., for
a political rally known as the March on
Washington for Jobs and Freedom.
Organized by civil rights and religious
groups, the event was designed to shed light
on the political and social challenges African
Americans faced across the United States.
African American/Black History Month
The March began with
a rally at the Washington
Monument featuring
several celebrities and
musicians. Participants
then marched the
mile-long National Mall
to the Lincoln Memorial.
                            Aerial view of the March on Washington
African American/Black History Month
The 3-hour-long program at the Lincoln
Memorial included speeches from prominent
civil rights and religious leaders and
culminated in Martin Luther King, Jr.’s "I
Have a Dream" speech.




                Martin Luther King, Jr.
             at the March on Washington
African American/Black History Month




       President John F. Kennedy with leaders of
               the March on Washington
African American/Black History Month
"We have witnessed today in Washington tens of
thousands of Americans, both Negro and white,
exercising their right to assemble peaceably and
direct the widest possible attention to a great national
issue. Efforts to secure equal treatment and equal
opportunity for all without regard to race, color,
creed, or nationality are neither novel nor difficult to
understand. What is different today is the intensified
and widespread public awareness of the need to move
forward in achieving these objectives, objectives
which are older than this Nation."
                               — John F. Kennedy
African American/Black History Month
The March on Washington, became a key
moment in the struggle for civil rights in the
United States. It was not only a plea for
equality and justice, it also helped pave the
way for both the ratification of the 24th
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
outlawing the poll tax and the passage of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964.
African American/Black History Month
 The following year, Congress passed the
 Civil Rights Act of 1964 as a concrete step
 toward fulfilling the promise of the
 Emancipation Proclamation.




          President Lyndon B. Johnson signing the
                  Civil Rights Act of 1964
African American/Black History Month
  “The story of African Americans is a
  story of resilience and perseverance. It
  traces a people who refused to accept
  the circumstances under which they
  arrived on these shores, and it
  chronicles the generations who fought
  for an America that truly reflects the
  ideals enshrined in our founding
  documents.”
           —President Barack Obama
           Presidential Proclamation 2012
Sources
The Emancipation Proclamation
     http://www.whitehouse.gov/
     http://www.archives.gov/
     http://www.loc.gov/
     http://www.alplm.org/
     http://www.history.com/

March on Washington
    http://www.thekingcenter.org/
    http://www.archives.gov/
    http://www.ourdocuments.gov/
    http://www.loc.gov/
    http://www.history.com/
Defense Equal Opportunity Management
                Institute,
     Patrick Air Force Base, Florida
             February 2013

 All photographs are public domain and are from
            various sources as cited.

 The findings in this report are not to be construed
  as an official DEOMI, U.S. military services, or
    the Department of Defense position, unless
     designated by other authorized documents.

More Related Content

What's hot

Black History Month
Black History MonthBlack History Month
Black History Monthblackbrite
 
Famous African Americans in History
Famous African Americans in HistoryFamous African Americans in History
Famous African Americans in HistoryAnabel Parra
 
Roaring twenties pp pres
Roaring twenties pp presRoaring twenties pp pres
Roaring twenties pp presSandra Waters
 
Black history month celebration
Black history month celebrationBlack history month celebration
Black history month celebrationhairbandsrule
 
Black History Slideshow
Black History Slideshow Black History Slideshow
Black History Slideshow Mick Melvin
 
The roaring twenties
The roaring twentiesThe roaring twenties
The roaring twentiesDave Phillips
 
Famous People In World History
Famous People In World HistoryFamous People In World History
Famous People In World Historykylemagee
 
Native americans ppt
Native americans pptNative americans ppt
Native americans pptMargret Chu
 
Chapter 20: Immigrants and Urban Life
Chapter 20: Immigrants and Urban LifeChapter 20: Immigrants and Urban Life
Chapter 20: Immigrants and Urban Lifeldaill
 
Malcolm X Power Point Presentation
Malcolm X Power Point PresentationMalcolm X Power Point Presentation
Malcolm X Power Point PresentationAmP31
 
Westward expansion after the civil war
Westward expansion after the civil warWestward expansion after the civil war
Westward expansion after the civil warBlake Harris
 
(12) the civil rights movement
(12) the civil rights movement(12) the civil rights movement
(12) the civil rights movementreghistory
 

What's hot (20)

Black History Month
Black History MonthBlack History Month
Black History Month
 
Famous African Americans in History
Famous African Americans in HistoryFamous African Americans in History
Famous African Americans in History
 
Civil Rights Movement
Civil Rights MovementCivil Rights Movement
Civil Rights Movement
 
Roaring twenties pp pres
Roaring twenties pp presRoaring twenties pp pres
Roaring twenties pp pres
 
Black History Month
Black History MonthBlack History Month
Black History Month
 
Black history month celebration
Black history month celebrationBlack history month celebration
Black history month celebration
 
The Roaring 20s
The Roaring 20sThe Roaring 20s
The Roaring 20s
 
The Civil War
The Civil WarThe Civil War
The Civil War
 
Black History Slideshow
Black History Slideshow Black History Slideshow
Black History Slideshow
 
Ida B. Wells
Ida B. WellsIda B. Wells
Ida B. Wells
 
Celebrate black history month
Celebrate black history monthCelebrate black history month
Celebrate black history month
 
The roaring twenties
The roaring twentiesThe roaring twenties
The roaring twenties
 
Rosa Parks
Rosa ParksRosa Parks
Rosa Parks
 
Famous People In World History
Famous People In World HistoryFamous People In World History
Famous People In World History
 
Native americans ppt
Native americans pptNative americans ppt
Native americans ppt
 
Chapter 20: Immigrants and Urban Life
Chapter 20: Immigrants and Urban LifeChapter 20: Immigrants and Urban Life
Chapter 20: Immigrants and Urban Life
 
Malcolm X Power Point Presentation
Malcolm X Power Point PresentationMalcolm X Power Point Presentation
Malcolm X Power Point Presentation
 
Rosa parks
Rosa parksRosa parks
Rosa parks
 
Westward expansion after the civil war
Westward expansion after the civil warWestward expansion after the civil war
Westward expansion after the civil war
 
(12) the civil rights movement
(12) the civil rights movement(12) the civil rights movement
(12) the civil rights movement
 

Similar to Emancipation Proclamation and March on Washington

1 Introduction African Americans And The Civil War
 1 Introduction African Americans And The Civil War  1 Introduction African Americans And The Civil War
1 Introduction African Americans And The Civil War MargaritoWhitt221
 
Milly YangMrs. SwansonAmerican Literature A314 April 201.docx
Milly YangMrs. SwansonAmerican Literature A314 April 201.docxMilly YangMrs. SwansonAmerican Literature A314 April 201.docx
Milly YangMrs. SwansonAmerican Literature A314 April 201.docxannandleola
 
Anauthenticawarenessofothercultures demossd
Anauthenticawarenessofothercultures demossdAnauthenticawarenessofothercultures demossd
Anauthenticawarenessofothercultures demossdjistudents
 
50 Events That Changed African American History
50 Events That Changed African American History50 Events That Changed African American History
50 Events That Changed African American HistoryBrendanOKane
 
Reconstruction of black & urban areas final
Reconstruction of black & urban areas finalReconstruction of black & urban areas final
Reconstruction of black & urban areas finalPeggy Bloomer
 
the history of the civil right movement in America .
the history of the civil right movement in America .the history of the civil right movement in America .
the history of the civil right movement in America .Fatine Boulaid
 
The Civil Rights Era, Part 28. Public School Desegregation in th.docx
The Civil Rights Era, Part 28. Public School Desegregation in th.docxThe Civil Rights Era, Part 28. Public School Desegregation in th.docx
The Civil Rights Era, Part 28. Public School Desegregation in th.docxrtodd643
 
CAN THIS PLEASE WORK
CAN THIS PLEASE WORKCAN THIS PLEASE WORK
CAN THIS PLEASE WORKMarx Blossom
 
CHAPTER 8 RECONSTRUCTION, Opening and Closing , 1865-1900Cont.docx
CHAPTER 8 RECONSTRUCTION, Opening and Closing , 1865-1900Cont.docxCHAPTER 8 RECONSTRUCTION, Opening and Closing , 1865-1900Cont.docx
CHAPTER 8 RECONSTRUCTION, Opening and Closing , 1865-1900Cont.docxchristinemaritza
 
Civil rights movement
Civil rights movementCivil rights movement
Civil rights movementDave Crane
 

Similar to Emancipation Proclamation and March on Washington (18)

1 Introduction African Americans And The Civil War
 1 Introduction African Americans And The Civil War  1 Introduction African Americans And The Civil War
1 Introduction African Americans And The Civil War
 
V4n4 60s in_america
V4n4 60s in_americaV4n4 60s in_america
V4n4 60s in_america
 
V4n4 60s in_america
V4n4 60s in_americaV4n4 60s in_america
V4n4 60s in_america
 
Milly YangMrs. SwansonAmerican Literature A314 April 201.docx
Milly YangMrs. SwansonAmerican Literature A314 April 201.docxMilly YangMrs. SwansonAmerican Literature A314 April 201.docx
Milly YangMrs. SwansonAmerican Literature A314 April 201.docx
 
Anauthenticawarenessofothercultures demossd
Anauthenticawarenessofothercultures demossdAnauthenticawarenessofothercultures demossd
Anauthenticawarenessofothercultures demossd
 
50 Events That Changed African American History
50 Events That Changed African American History50 Events That Changed African American History
50 Events That Changed African American History
 
Reconstruction of black & urban areas final
Reconstruction of black & urban areas finalReconstruction of black & urban areas final
Reconstruction of black & urban areas final
 
the history of the civil right movement in America .
the history of the civil right movement in America .the history of the civil right movement in America .
the history of the civil right movement in America .
 
Jim Crow Law
Jim Crow LawJim Crow Law
Jim Crow Law
 
Have things changed?
Have things changed?Have things changed?
Have things changed?
 
CIVIL WAR 2
CIVIL WAR 2CIVIL WAR 2
CIVIL WAR 2
 
The Civil Rights Era, Part 28. Public School Desegregation in th.docx
The Civil Rights Era, Part 28. Public School Desegregation in th.docxThe Civil Rights Era, Part 28. Public School Desegregation in th.docx
The Civil Rights Era, Part 28. Public School Desegregation in th.docx
 
Script
ScriptScript
Script
 
Script
ScriptScript
Script
 
CAN THIS PLEASE WORK
CAN THIS PLEASE WORKCAN THIS PLEASE WORK
CAN THIS PLEASE WORK
 
CHAPTER 8 RECONSTRUCTION, Opening and Closing , 1865-1900Cont.docx
CHAPTER 8 RECONSTRUCTION, Opening and Closing , 1865-1900Cont.docxCHAPTER 8 RECONSTRUCTION, Opening and Closing , 1865-1900Cont.docx
CHAPTER 8 RECONSTRUCTION, Opening and Closing , 1865-1900Cont.docx
 
Chapter 45
Chapter 45Chapter 45
Chapter 45
 
Civil rights movement
Civil rights movementCivil rights movement
Civil rights movement
 

Emancipation Proclamation and March on Washington

  • 1. African American/Black History Month At the Crossroads of Freedom and Equality: The Emancipation Proclamation and the March on Washington
  • 2. African American/Black History Month In 2013, the United States will commemorate two events that changed the course of the nation—the 1863 Emancipation Proclamation and the 1963 March on Washington.
  • 3. African American/Black History Month These milestone events in American history were the culmination of decades of struggles by individuals—both famous and unknown— who believed in the American promise that this nation was “dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.”
  • 4. African American/Black History Month Abraham Lincoln and his Emancipation Proclamation
  • 5. African American/Black History Month President Abraham Lincoln issued the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation on September 22, 1862. It stipulated that if the Southern states did not cease their rebellion by January 1, 1863, the Proclamation would go into effect.
  • 6. African American/Black History Month The Emancipation Proclamation applied only to states that had seceded from the Union, leaving slavery untouched in the border states. It also exempted parts of the Confederacy that had already come under Northern control. Most important, the freedom it promised depended upon Union military victory.
  • 7. African American/Black History Month Lincoln justified the Proclamation as a war measure intended to disable the Confederacy’s use of slaves in the war effort. Being cautious to respect the limits of his authority, Lincoln applied the Emancipation Proclamation only to the Southern states in rebellion.
  • 8. African American/Black History Month The Southern states used slaves to support their armies on the battlefield and to care for their homes so more men could fight. White officers eating while a Black servant stands behind them with a pitcher of water
  • 9. African American/Black History Month Lincoln first proposed the Emancipation Proclamation to his cabinet in the summer of 1862, and many of the cabinet secretaries were apathetic or worried that the Proclamation was too drastic. Lincoln’s commitment to the necessity of the Proclamation, along with the Union victory at Antietam, finally persuaded his cabinet members to support him.
  • 10. African American/Black History Month Lincoln Reading the Emancipation Proclamation to his Cabinet [Painting]. Boston; Museum of Fine Arts.
  • 11. African American/Black History Month Lincoln also declared that the Proclamation would be enforced under his power as Commander-in-Chief, and that the freedom of the slaves would be maintained by the Executive government of the United States.
  • 12. African American/Black History Month Up until September 1862, the central focus of the war had been to preserve the Union. With the issuance of the Emancipation Proclamation, freedom for slaves became a legitimate war plan.
  • 13. African American/Black History Month Lincoln declared in the Proclamation that African Americans of “suitable condition, would be received into the armed service of the United States.” Five months after the Proclamation took effect, the War Department of the United States issued General Order No. 143, establishing the United States Colored Troops.
  • 14. African American/Black History Month When the Confederacy did not yield, Lincoln issued the final Emancipation Proclamation on January 1, 1863. The inkwell used by Lincoln, the Proclamation draft and Lincoln's pen
  • 15. African American/Black History Month By the end of the war, over 200,000 African Americans would serve in the Union Army and Navy. African-American Union Soldiers
  • 16. African American/Black History Month Although the Proclamation initially freed only the slaves in the rebellious states, by the end of the war the Proclamation had influenced and prepared citizens to advocate and accept abolition for all slaves in both the North and South. The 13th Amendment, which abolished slavery in the United States, was passed on December 6, 1865.
  • 17. African American/Black History Month Lincoln considered the Emancipation Proclamation the crowning achievement of his presidency.
  • 18. African American/Black History Month “I never, in my life, felt more certain that I was doing right, than I do in signing this paper. If my name ever goes into history it will be for this act, and my whole soul is in it.”
  • 19. African American/Black History Month Although the Emancipation Proclamation did not end slavery in the nation, it captured the hearts and imaginations of millions of Americans and fundamentally transformed the character of the war. After January 1, 1863, every advance of federal troops expanded the domain of freedom.
  • 20. African American/Black History Month From the first days of the Civil War, slaves had acted to secure their own liberty. The Emancipation Proclamation confirmed their insistence that the war for the Union must become a war for freedom. It added moral force to the Union cause and strengthened the Union both militarily and politically.
  • 21. African American/Black History Month As a milestone along the road to slavery's final destruction, the Emancipation Proclamation has assumed a place among the great documents of human freedom. Former Slave, Sally Fickland views the Emancipation Proclamation, 1947
  • 23. African American/Black History Month The March on Washington was envisioned by A. Philip Randolph, a long-time civil rights activist dedicated to improving the economic condition of Black Americans. When Randolph first proposed the march in late 1962, he received little response from other civil A. Philip Randolph rights leaders.
  • 24. African American/Black History Month He knew that cooperation would be difficult among civil rights leaders because each had his own agenda for the civil rights movement, and the leaders competed for funding and press coverage. He knew that for the March on Washington to be successful, all civil rights leaders would have to support the event.
  • 25. African American/Black History Month The "Big Six" leaders were James Farmer, of the Congress of Racial Equality; Martin Luther King, Jr., of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference; John Lewis, of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee; A. Philip Randolph, of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters; Roy Wilkins, of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; and Whitney Young, Jr., of the National Urban League.
  • 26. African American/Black History Month John Lewis, Whitney Young, A. Philip Randolph, Martin Luther King, Jr., James Farmer and Roy Wilkins met in March 1963 in New York City to organize the March on Washington.
  • 27. African American/Black History Month The March on Washington was not universally embraced by civil rights leaders, and President John F. Kennedy was initially opposed to the March. Kennedy was concerned that the event might exacerbate already heightened racial tensions across the country and perhaps erode public support for the civil rights movement at large.
  • 28. African American/Black History Month Additionally, various influential organizations and individuals opposed the March. Besides the expected, such as Southern segregationists and members of the Ku Klux Klan, the Black- separatist group Nation of Islam and its outspoken member Malcolm X adamantly disagreed with the peaceful intentions of the event. He felt it presented an inaccurate, sanitized pageant of racial harmony and called it the “Farce on Washington.”
  • 29. African American/Black History Month In May, at the height of the Birmingham Campaign, King joined A. Philip Randolph, James Farmer, and Charles McDew. After notifying President Kennedy of their intent, the leaders of the major civil rights organizations set the march date for August 28th.
  • 30. African American/Black History Month The goals of the protest included:  a comprehensive civil rights bill that would do away with segregated public accommodations  protection of the right to vote  mechanisms for seeking redress of violations of constitutional rights  desegregation of all public schools in 1963  federal work programs to train and place unemployed workers  Federal Fair Employment Practices Act barring discrimination in all employment
  • 31. African American/Black History Month On August 28, 1963, more than 200,000 Americans gathered in Washington, D.C., for a political rally known as the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. Organized by civil rights and religious groups, the event was designed to shed light on the political and social challenges African Americans faced across the United States.
  • 32. African American/Black History Month The March began with a rally at the Washington Monument featuring several celebrities and musicians. Participants then marched the mile-long National Mall to the Lincoln Memorial. Aerial view of the March on Washington
  • 33. African American/Black History Month The 3-hour-long program at the Lincoln Memorial included speeches from prominent civil rights and religious leaders and culminated in Martin Luther King, Jr.’s "I Have a Dream" speech. Martin Luther King, Jr. at the March on Washington
  • 34. African American/Black History Month President John F. Kennedy with leaders of the March on Washington
  • 35. African American/Black History Month "We have witnessed today in Washington tens of thousands of Americans, both Negro and white, exercising their right to assemble peaceably and direct the widest possible attention to a great national issue. Efforts to secure equal treatment and equal opportunity for all without regard to race, color, creed, or nationality are neither novel nor difficult to understand. What is different today is the intensified and widespread public awareness of the need to move forward in achieving these objectives, objectives which are older than this Nation." — John F. Kennedy
  • 36. African American/Black History Month The March on Washington, became a key moment in the struggle for civil rights in the United States. It was not only a plea for equality and justice, it also helped pave the way for both the ratification of the 24th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution outlawing the poll tax and the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
  • 37. African American/Black History Month The following year, Congress passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 as a concrete step toward fulfilling the promise of the Emancipation Proclamation. President Lyndon B. Johnson signing the Civil Rights Act of 1964
  • 38. African American/Black History Month “The story of African Americans is a story of resilience and perseverance. It traces a people who refused to accept the circumstances under which they arrived on these shores, and it chronicles the generations who fought for an America that truly reflects the ideals enshrined in our founding documents.” —President Barack Obama Presidential Proclamation 2012
  • 39. Sources The Emancipation Proclamation http://www.whitehouse.gov/ http://www.archives.gov/ http://www.loc.gov/ http://www.alplm.org/ http://www.history.com/ March on Washington http://www.thekingcenter.org/ http://www.archives.gov/ http://www.ourdocuments.gov/ http://www.loc.gov/ http://www.history.com/
  • 40. Defense Equal Opportunity Management Institute, Patrick Air Force Base, Florida February 2013 All photographs are public domain and are from various sources as cited. The findings in this report are not to be construed as an official DEOMI, U.S. military services, or the Department of Defense position, unless designated by other authorized documents.