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  • In his speech concerning violence in Selma, Alabama, President Johnson . . .
    In his speech concerning violence in Selma, Alabama, President Johnson used the words "we shall overcome" to: A Declare that victory in Vietnam had been achieved B Show his support for the civil rights movement C Encourage Americans to work hard to win the Cold War D Emphasize that he would punish civil rights activists
  • The History Place - Great Speeches Collection: Lyndon B. Johnson Speech . . .
    President Lyndon B Johnson - March 15, 1965 Post-note: On August 6, 1965, President Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act banning the practice of administering literacy, knowledge or other tests which had been traditionally used to keep African Americans from voting
  • Johnson, We Shall Overcome, Speech Text - Voices of Democracy
    LYNDON B JOHNSON, “WE SHALL OVERCOME” (15 MARCH 1965) [1] Mr Speaker, Mr President, Members of the Congress: [2] I speak tonight for the dignity of man and the destiny of democracy [3] I urge every member of both parties, Americans of all religions and of all colors, from every section of this country, to join me in that cause
  • Selma March - LBJ, Voting Rights, 1965 | Britannica
    On March 15, just over a week after Bloody Sunday, Pres Lyndon B Johnson introduced voting rights legislation in an address to a joint session of Congress In what became a famous speech, he identified the clash in Selma as a turning point in U S history akin to the Battles of Lexington and Concord in the American Revolution Invoking the protest song “We Shall Overcome” that had become
  • 50 Years Ago, Lyndon Johnson Delivered The Most Perfectly Radical . . .
    In a rhetorical flourish that moved Dr Martin Luther King, Jr to tears, Johnson invoked the anthem of the civil rights movement itself — twice speaking the words “We Shall Overcome ” The movie Selma, which documents the Alabama state troopers’ terrorist attack on the voting rights marchers and the events that surrounded this attack
  • March 15, 1965: Lyndon Johnson’s ‘We Shall Overcome’ Speech
    Broadcast of Lyndon B Johnson's “We Shall Overcome” speech, given during the civil-rights movement shortly after events in Selma, Alabama 7 featured the attack on voting-rights
  • Question 9 of 10 in His Speech Concerning Violence in Selma, Alabama . . .
    Question 9 of 10 In his speech concerning violence in Selma, Alabama President Johnson used the words "we shall overcome" to: A Show his support for the civil rights movement B Emphasize that he would punish civil rights activists C Encourage Americans to work hard to win the Cold War D Declare that victory in Vietnam had been achieved
  • And We Shall Overcome: President Lyndon B. Johnsons Special Message . . .
    When he assumed the presidency following the assassination of John F Kennedy in November 1963, however, Johnson called on Americans “to eliminate from this nation every trace of discrimination and oppression that is based upon race or color,” and in the following speech adopted the “We Shall Overcome” slogan of civil rights activists
  • Civil Rights, Voting Rights, and the Selma March
    The violence in Selma compelled President Johnson to introduce a federal voting-rights bill In a speech to Congress, Johnson introduced the bill and, using the language of Civil Rights singers, said, "We shall overcome " The Selma-to-Montgomery voting campaign attracted national attention and political support necessary for Congress to pass
  • We Shall Overcome - White House Historical Association
    Johnson, who had served in the House and the Senate before becoming Vice President and President, lobbied Congress hard to support the proposed Voting Rights Act It passed the Senate on May 25, 1965, easily securing cloture with a 77 to 19 bipartisan vote 23 The legislation then moved to the House of Representatives, which passed it on July 9





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