Profiles the fearless, resourceful female leaders of the civil rights movement, including Ida Wells, who led the protest against lynching, and Jo Ann Robinson, who helped launch the Montgomery bus boycott.
Question: Who was known as the First Lady of the U.S. civil rights movement? Answer: Coretta Scott King. She helped her husband, Martin Luther King Jr., fight for equal rights for African Americans in the 1950s and 1960s.
A personal account of the triumph of the Southern Black woman who overcame poverty, limited education, and racism to become a leader in the civil rights movement.
This series introduces children (approximate reading level grade four and up) to the lives of African Americans who have made their marks in the arts, law, politics, sports, science, business, and other fields.
Story of Ida B. Wells, one of the great, yet one of the least known, civil rights leaders. A promised journalist, she is remembered for her leadership in women's voting rights, the NAACP, and anti-lynching.
Tells the stories of ten African-American women freedom fighters.
Peter Roop. _ _ _ BEFORE I MADE HISTORY . . . 14 TM Rosa.
Freedom Cannot Rest: Ella Baker and the Civil Rights Movement brings alive some of the most turbulent and dramatic years in our nation's history.
Unceasing Militant is the first full-length biography of Terrell, bringing her vibrant voice andpersonality to life"--
A portrait of the African American woman immortalized for refusing to surrender her bus seat to a white passenger examines who Rosa Parks was before, during, and after her historic act.
In the generation that followed Frederick Douglass, no African Americanwas more prominent, or more outspoken, than Ida B. Wells. Her crusadeagainst lynching in the 1890s made her famous, or notorious,...