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Postwar Georgia

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Postwar Georgia. Chapters 26 and 27. Make Book!. You will take your notes in a small book that we will make in class. Make sure you bring this book, your workbook, and something to draw with everyday to class. EQ – Chapter 26 – Write on front page. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Postwar Georgia Chapters 26 and 27
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Page 1: Postwar Georgia

Postwar Georgia

Chapters 26 and 27

Page 2: Postwar Georgia

Make Book!• You will take your notes in a small book that we will make in class. Make sure you bring this book, your workbook, and something to draw with everyday to class.

Page 3: Postwar Georgia

EQ – Chapter 26 – Write on front page.

• 1. How did agriculture transform Georgia’s growth? SS8H10a

• How did Atlanta’s mayor’s Hartsfield and Allen contribute to the growth and development of Georgia? SS8H10b

• What impact did Ellis Arnall have on Georgia?• SS8H10c

Page 4: Postwar Georgia

Page 1 – Changes on the Farm

• Tractors were growing in popularity.

• Farms became fewer and larger.

Farming turned from agriculture to livestock.•

These changed meant fewer farm workers were needed so many people moved into the cities for work.

• Draw a picture beside each of these facts to illustrate them.

Page 5: Postwar Georgia

Check page 95

• 1. C• 2. B• 3. A

Page 6: Postwar Georgia

Atlanta Grows UP – Divide page in ½

• William Hartsfield

• Helped bring the first • Airport to Atlanta.– It one of the busiest in the USA!

During his time as mayor Atlanta experienced extreme population growth !

Draw a picture of an airplane or airport for William Hartsfield.

Page 7: Postwar Georgia

Atlanta Grows Up

• Ivan Allen, Jr.

• Served as mayor from 1962-1970.• Built memorial Arts, cultural center and civic

center.• Brought the Braves, Falcons, and Hawks to

Atlanta!

• Draw a

Page 8: Postwar Georgia

Check page 97

• 1. False• 2. True• 3. False• 4. True• 5. True

Page 9: Postwar Georgia

Progressive Governor – 1 page

• Ellis Arnall– One of the most open-minded and effective

governors in GA.– During his time as governor (1943-1947) GA

changed from a poor rural state to one of the most progressive in the South!

– He beat Eugene Talmadge in the election and the GA General Assembly adopted his entire reform program!

– Education was a top priority.– Changed voting age to 18, abolished poll tax,

revised the state constitution, paid off the state debt, and modernized the prison system

Page 10: Postwar Georgia

Ellis Arnall

Illustrate 3 of the changes Ellis Arnall made in Georgia.

Page 11: Postwar Georgia

Chapter 27 – Civil Rights in Georgia

• Describe the major developments in civil rights and Georgia’s role during the 1940s and 1950s. Include Herman Talmadge, Benjamin Mays, the 1946 governor’s race, end of the white primary, Brown v. Board of Education, Martin Luther King, Jr., and the 1956 state flag.

Page 12: Postwar Georgia

Benjamin Mays

• He was a minister and president of Morehouse College.

• Spoke out against segregation even before the Civil Rights Movement.

• Impacted Martin Luther King, Jr.• Draw a figure with a thought – Bubble speaking out agains– Segregation.

• Video

Page 13: Postwar Georgia

Martin Luther King, Jr. - 1 page• Minister and national leader of the civil rights

movement in America.• Nonviolent methods such as marches,

demonstrations, and boycotts.• Formed the SCLC – Southern Christian Leadership

Conference.• Draw a picture of figures marching– In protest against segregation.

Page 14: Postwar Georgia

Government Gets Involved – ½ page

• White primary – This practice of only allowing whites to vote in primaries ended in 1946.– *Draw a banner that reads – Everyone can vote!

Page 15: Postwar Georgia

Government Gets Involved – ½ page

• 1946 Governor’s Race – • Eugene Talmadge won the election but because he was sick

many crossed his name off the ballot and wrote in his son.• To decide who was Governor the General Assembly chose

between the two people with the largest number of write in votes and Herman Talmadge won!

• Ellis Arnall didn’t like this and resigned to make his Lt. Governor (Melvin Thompson) , Governor.

• The GA Supreme Court said that the GA was wrong and that Melvin Thompson was legally governor!

• *Draw 2 men fighting over being governor. video

Page 16: Postwar Georgia

The Government Gets Involved – ½ page

• Brown Vs. Board of Education– In 1954 the US Supreme Court ruled that separate

was not equal (Plessy vs. Ferguson) and that segregation in education was unconstitutional!

Herman Talmadge was governor and strongly opposed this ruling!

video

Page 17: Postwar Georgia

Government Gets Involved – ½ page

• In 1956 the General Assembly voted to change Georgia’s flag to include the Confederate battle flag.

Page 18: Postwar Georgia

Chapter 28 - EQs

• What role did Georgia and prominent Georgians play in the Civil Rights Movmement of the 1960s? SS8H11b

• What role did Andew Young have on Georgia? SS8H11c

Page 19: Postwar Georgia

Civil Rights Movement – 1 page of book

• SNCC – non violent, peaceful college students founded this group (Student Non-Violent coordinating Committee)

• They worked to stop segregation in public places and promote black voter registration.

• Sibley commission – group of Georgians who recommended that each individual district decide if they wanted to integrate their schools (even though federal law said they must).

Page 20: Postwar Georgia

Charlayne Hunter & Hamilton Holmes

• First African American students to enter the University of Georgia (1961).

Page 21: Postwar Georgia

Albany Movement

• Began in the fall of 1961-1962.• Involved the NAACP and SNCC.• Their goal was to end all types of segregation

in the city.• Martin Luther King Jr. joined them but the

movement failed. MLK learned they tried to focus on too many things.

Page 22: Postwar Georgia

March on Washington

• August, 1963• More than 250,000 people marched in

Washington, D.C. to demand equal rights for African American citizens.

• Martin Luther King made his famous “I have a Dream” speech here.

• Video

Page 23: Postwar Georgia
Page 24: Postwar Georgia
Page 25: Postwar Georgia

Civil Rights Act

• 1964• This act prohibited discrimination based on

color, race or religion in places like restaurants, hotels, and theaters, and schools.

• It resulted in one of the longest debates in the Senate. Richard Russell opposed the bill and organized a filibuster that lasted 75 days.

• In June 1964, the Senate voted to pass the Civil Rights Act 73-27.

Page 26: Postwar Georgia

Lester Maddox• Believed in states rights and discrimination.• Closed his restaurant instead of obeying the

law. • He was elected governor in 1966 despite not

winning the majority of votes.• Surprisingly to many he hired more African

Americans to work in the government and reformed the prison system.

• He had “People’s Day”.

Page 27: Postwar Georgia
Page 28: Postwar Georgia

Maynard Jackson

• In 1973, Maynard Jackson, age 35, was elected as the first African American mayor of Atlanta.

Page 29: Postwar Georgia

Andrew Young

• Civil rights activist.• Worked with MLK.• In 1972 he became a US Congressman, the

first ever to be elected since Reconstruction.• In 1977, Jimmy Carter named him ambassador

to the United Nations.• Elected mayor in 1981.• Helped bring the Olympics in 1996.

Page 30: Postwar Georgia

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