How Did Martin Luther King Influence The Civil Rights Movement

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Martin Luther King, Jr.
Introduction
Martin Luther King, Jr. was easily the biggest influence in Americas fight for an equal civilisation, as a kid he grew up in a time where black people lived in oppression. Living in the conditions he did, he always had a dream of a fair life, where him and the rest of his race could live in cultural syncretism with the rest of America. As a young kid he promised his mum “I’m going to turn this world upside down” and later as one of the biggest figures in the American civil rights movement he did (Pastan, Martin Luther King Jr, 2004).
Growing Up With the Jim Crow Laws
Martin Luther King, Jr. was born in Atlanta Georgia in the year of 1929 on January 15. As I mentioned in my Introduction Martin lived in a time of black oppression. The blacks or as they were more commonly called then Negroes were heavily restricted by the Jim Crow laws that were passed in 1896. The Jim Crow laws were a string of anti-black laws that ruled that there was to be separate facilities for blacks and whites such as water fountains, restrooms, schools and seating on public transport (Pastan, Martin
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Rosa Parks was a well-respected figure head within the Negro community. Ms Parks was arrested on December 1 1955 when she boarded a bus to go home, at the next stop three white riders got on. There were no more seats in the white section so the bus driver told Rosa to give up her side so she simply said “No”. After her arrest, it occurred to Nixon that since the facilities where meant to be kept separate then the police had wrongly arrested Rosa meaning they could argue in a supreme caught that the Jim Crow laws were wrong. He phoned Martin immediately. Before they went to the supreme court they decided to plan a