Black Baptist Women and the Birmingham Civil Rights Movement, 1956-1963: Historians and Journalists During and Immediately After the Civil Rights Movement Emphasized the Role of Religion in the Movement. They Showed How the Black Church and Its Leaders Provided the Charisma, Finance, Inspiration, Spiritual Nurture, And the Foot Soldiers That Made the Movement Successful. Black Baptist Women and the Birmingham Civil Rights Movement, 1956-1963: Historians and Journalists During and Immediately After the Civil Rights Movement Emphasized the Role of Religion in the Movement. They Showed How the Black Church and Its Leaders Provided the Charisma, Finance, Inspiration, Spiritual Nurture, And the Foot Soldiers That Made the Movement Successful.

Black Baptist Women and the Birmingham Civil Rights Movement, 1956-1963: Historians and Journalists During and Immediately After the Civil Rights Movement Emphasized the Role of Religion in the Movement. They Showed How the Black Church and Its Leaders Provided the Charisma, Finance, Inspiration, Spiritual Nurture, And the Foot Soldiers That Made the Movement Successful‪.‬

Baptist History and Heritage 2005, Summer-Fall, 40, 3

    • 2,99 €
    • 2,99 €

Publisher Description

Most of the attention was lavished on ordained clergy and prominent male leadership figures such as Martin Luther King, Jr., Ralph Abernathy, Wyatt T. Walker, James Farmer, and Fred Shuttlesworth. In recent years, more attention has been given to the work of religious women, especially those of grassroots importance in the various civil rights campaigns. Scholars, many of them females, have sought to show how the history of the black women's religious experience informed their sense of social responsibility and activism. One of the most important civil rights campaigns occurred in Birmingham, Alabama, between 1956 and 1963, and a study of this campaign demonstrates the importance of women at all levels. Before looking at the role of women, especially Baptist women involved in the Birmingham movement, an examination of the movement's origin and major features is necessary. In 1956, many persons considered Birmingham, which was often referred to as the Johannesburg of the South, to be the most segregated city in the United States. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) became the most active group in protesting discrimination in Birmingham and throughout Alabama. The outlawing of the NAACP by the state of Alabama was the spark that set off a mass-based Civil Rights Movement. Led by Attorney General John Patterson, the state of Alabama successfully won an injunction against the NAACP, preventing the association from operating in the state until it complied with Alabama's new registration requirements for organizations headquartered outside the state. One requirement was that an organization must present its membership rolls to the state, but the Alabama NAACP officials were convinced that adhering to this requirement would bring all kinds of reprisals against its members.

GENRE
History
RELEASED
2005
22 June
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
13
Pages
PUBLISHER
Baptist History and Heritage Society
SIZE
294.3
KB

More Books by Baptist History and Heritage

The Ambiguity of Historical Study: Was Mullins Right Or Wrong About Confessions? in His Delightful Book, The Churches the Apostles Left Behind, The Late Raymond E. Brown, New Testament Scholar, Proved That There Is a Range of Ecclesiological Diversity in the New Testament That Complicates the Claim of Different Churches That Their Ecclesiology Is Faithful to the New Testament (Edgar Young Mullins) (Critical Essay) The Ambiguity of Historical Study: Was Mullins Right Or Wrong About Confessions? in His Delightful Book, The Churches the Apostles Left Behind, The Late Raymond E. Brown, New Testament Scholar, Proved That There Is a Range of Ecclesiological Diversity in the New Testament That Complicates the Claim of Different Churches That Their Ecclesiology Is Faithful to the New Testament (Edgar Young Mullins) (Critical Essay)
2008
Jennings Randolph: Servant, Statesman, Seventh Day Baptist: Many Advantages Come Along with Being Part of the Baptist Family, Especially As Those Advantages Are Expressed Through the Relationships We Have with Our Baptist Brothers and Sisters. Inside the Baptist Family, We Have Our Own Clans, And Kinship Inside Those Clans Is Meaningful (Biography) Jennings Randolph: Servant, Statesman, Seventh Day Baptist: Many Advantages Come Along with Being Part of the Baptist Family, Especially As Those Advantages Are Expressed Through the Relationships We Have with Our Baptist Brothers and Sisters. Inside the Baptist Family, We Have Our Own Clans, And Kinship Inside Those Clans Is Meaningful (Biography)
2006
Billy Graham: An Appreciation: Wherever One Travels Around the World, The Names of Three Baptists Are Immediately Known and Appreciated--Jimmy Carter, Billy Graham and Martin Luther King, Jr. One Is a Politician, One an Evangelist, And the Other Was a Civil Rights Leader. All of Them Have Given Baptists and the Christian Faith a Good Reputation (Biography) Billy Graham: An Appreciation: Wherever One Travels Around the World, The Names of Three Baptists Are Immediately Known and Appreciated--Jimmy Carter, Billy Graham and Martin Luther King, Jr. One Is a Politician, One an Evangelist, And the Other Was a Civil Rights Leader. All of Them Have Given Baptists and the Christian Faith a Good Reputation (Biography)
2006
Women in Cultural Captivity: British Women and the Zenana Mission: In a Little Pamphlet Outlining the Work of Two British Baptist Women, Marianne Lewis and Elizabeth Sale: Pioneers of Missionary Work Among Women, (1) Ernest Payne Remarked That 1792 was a Key Year for Two Publications (Enquiry Into the Obligations of Christians to Use Means for the Conversion of the Heathen) (A Vindication of the Rights of Women) Women in Cultural Captivity: British Women and the Zenana Mission: In a Little Pamphlet Outlining the Work of Two British Baptist Women, Marianne Lewis and Elizabeth Sale: Pioneers of Missionary Work Among Women, (1) Ernest Payne Remarked That 1792 was a Key Year for Two Publications (Enquiry Into the Obligations of Christians to Use Means for the Conversion of the Heathen) (A Vindication of the Rights of Women)
2006
The Quiet Revolutionary: Amelia Morton Bishop: Following Is the Story of a Simple Texas Housewife, Mother, Sometime Denominational Worker (Especially in the Woman's Missionary Union-Wmu), Church Volunteer, School Teacher, University Professor, And Free-Lance Writer. (1) That Woman, Amelia Morton Bishop, Now Lives in Austin, Texas. To Our Way of Thinking, She Is a Quiet Revolutionary (Biography) The Quiet Revolutionary: Amelia Morton Bishop: Following Is the Story of a Simple Texas Housewife, Mother, Sometime Denominational Worker (Especially in the Woman's Missionary Union-Wmu), Church Volunteer, School Teacher, University Professor, And Free-Lance Writer. (1) That Woman, Amelia Morton Bishop, Now Lives in Austin, Texas. To Our Way of Thinking, She Is a Quiet Revolutionary (Biography)
2006
Baptist Women Walking Together in America, 1950-2000: when Did You Become Captivated by the Study of History? I was Born in a Twin-City Area of North Louisiana, Behind the First Baptist Church of One of the Twin Communities and Around the Corner from a School Where I Studied American History Under a Rare Phenomenon, A Seventh-Grade Teacher with a Ph.D. In History. Baptist Women Walking Together in America, 1950-2000: when Did You Become Captivated by the Study of History? I was Born in a Twin-City Area of North Louisiana, Behind the First Baptist Church of One of the Twin Communities and Around the Corner from a School Where I Studied American History Under a Rare Phenomenon, A Seventh-Grade Teacher with a Ph.D. In History.
2005