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The Freedom Rides Chapter 29

  • First Ride

    First Ride
    The first ride was led by a core director. The were thirteen riders: seven were black and six were white.
  • Period: to

    Freedom Ride

  • New Orleans

    New Orleans
    The riders arrive to New Orleans, Lousiana to celebrate the anniversary of the Brown vs. Board of education, which outlaw segregation in schools.
  • South Carolina

    South Carolina
    The next day they arrive in South Carolina, it was pretty an unevenful day and one man got arested.
  • Atlanta, Georgia

    Atlanta, Georgia
    On the 19th they arrive in Atlanta, Georgia and recieve a speech from Martin Luther King Jr. to promote them on what they were doing.
  • Alabama

    Alabama
    The last stop was in Alabama where one buses of riders were fire bomed by a mob of angry protestors. All of the riders survived because of the state safety office. The second bus of riders arrived in Birmingham and were attacked by a group of angry people. After this day the riders questioned if they wanted to contine their rides because they were in danger.
  • Ride Back Home

    Ride Back Home
    At this point the riders were already into the deep south which was very dangerous land for racial equality. Because of this John Seigenthaler was sent to help them get back to New Orleans safely.
  • Home

    Home
    On May 22, 1961 student activists in Nashville made a point that if the freedom riders end because of violence, then our freedom may end because of that violence. Some of those students then joined the freedom riders in support. Once they joined the freedom riders, hundreds of other students decided they wanted to too. As the year progressed they didnt just help to stop segregation there, they helped outlaw segregation everywhere. They were willing to work for an end to segregation.
  • Freedom Riders support

    Freedom Riders support
    The Freedom Riders started to head back to Washington in order to replace the wounded riders with new ones and send them back home to their families. The Freedom Riders did not stop there, their rides contuinued all throughout the Civil Rights Movement.