The Impact of the Civil Rights Movement

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The way Americans lived 80 years ago has a significant impact on our society today. Major work from small-town residents during the 1930s, make it possible for Americans to live as comfortably as they do currently. Civil rights were improved and the fields of technology, science, and medicine soared. Ambitious geniuses were improving such topics, but little did they realize that they were actually shaping future American culture.The important achievements and discoveries made during the 1930s made life easier for Americans today.

Although the civil rights movement was at its peak during the 1960s, the civil accomplishments made during the 1930s were just as important. The NAACP had the most influence on the movement at the time. Being the world’s biggest and most powerful civil rights organization, it is the NAACP’s job to fight for the equality of colored people.An anti-lynching campaign was launched by two democratic senators: Edward Costigan and Robert Wagner. Through various scourges against the whole country, the NAACP finally made its point by producing the Costigan-Wagner bill. The document expressed anti-lynching ideals and equality for every American, regardless of race. Although the bill was unsuccessful in prevailing over the Senate filibuster in 1938, many American citizens began to ponder over the suggestion of civil rights (Anti-Lynching). The NAACP, without even knowing it, started a civil rights revolution. Very gradually, ideals containing civil rights spread to small towns all over America. The townspeople’s original views on race and color began to fade, while opinions of equality and liberty took their place. The 1930s was the foundation for secular rights. Today, the United States has citizens of every color...

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...ere. Without the events that happened during that time, there would still be major illness, segregation, and frankly, pure unhappiness. Americans of every social class are affected by the deeds from important people from the 1930s, even if they choose to ignore or deny it. The 1930s was a crucial decade in America’s progressing timeline, and without every single little detail of event, the difference between small town life 80 years ago and small town life today would be nonexistent.

Works Cited

Bondi, Victor. American Decades. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995. Print.

Sutton, Bettye. American Cultural History. Lone Star College-Kingwood Library, 1999. Web.

NAACP’s Anti-Lynching Campaign in the 1930s. National Endowment for the Humanities. 27 July

2010. Web. 12 March 2014.

Leishman, J. Gordon. A History of Helicopter Flight. UM, 2000. Web. 18 March 2014.

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