Home / Full timeline / Civil rights forces launch a drive against bias in Birmingham, AL. The city’s police force violently harass the demonstrators. The protest continues until May 10th, when a new agreement is signed but it leads to more riots and violence.
Civil rights forces launch a drive against bias in Birmingham, AL. The city’s police force violently harass the demonstrators. The protest continues until May 10th, when a new agreement is signed but it leads to more riots and violence.
1962 (Apr 3)
Civil rights forces led by Martin Luther King, Jr., launched a drive against bias in Birmingham, Alabama. The city's police force, led by Commissioner Eugene "Bull" Connor, used high powered water hoses and dogs against demonstrators. The forceful repression and legal harassment, including massive arrests, aroused public opinion, especially in the North. President John F. Kennedy hoped to use this new public awareness to garner support for the civil rights proposals he had presented to Congress in March. The Birmingham protests continued until May 10, when an agreement was signed providing gradual desegregation of public accommodations. But the agreement was followed by bombings of homes and businesses of Black leaders, causing further rioting.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.