The first appearance of civil rights movement was in 1955 called the Montgomery Bus Boycott, where a young African American female named Rosa Parks would not give her seat up to a white man.
Another change was the Albany Movement in 1961 which aimed to end all forms of racial segregation in the city, focusing initially on desegregating travel facilities, forming a permanent biracial committee to discuss further desegregation, and the release of those jailed in segregation protests.
The third civil rights movement was the Birmingham Campaign in early 1963, led by the Southern Christian Leadership Conference which sought to bring national attention of the efforts of local black leaders to desegregate public facilities in Birmingham, Alabama.
The fourth movement was the March on Washington which was a massive protest that occurred in August 1963, when around 250,000 people gathered in front of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C.
Another civil rights movement was on March 7, 1965, in Selma, Alabama, a 600-person civil rights demonstration ends in violence when marchers are attacked and beaten by white state troopers and sheriff's deputies. The day's events became known as "Bloody Sunday."
One of the last civil rights changes was the Chicago Freedom Movement, led by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., James Bevel, and Al Raby, was created to challenge systemic racial segregation and discrimination in Chicago and its suburbs.
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