Monday, March 14, 2016

Social Studies - Research Notes

Below are the notes from class that students can use as their initial resource for their wampum project.

If students research on their own at home or during Homework Club, they are reminded that they must turn the information they read into their own words. For the last Social Studies project (on Ancient Athens), there were a handful of students who had copied and pasted information into their projects.

The order of notes: Women's Suffrage, The Civil Rights Movement, and the Magna Carta.

All information below was taken from this website: Click here

Civil Rights
Women's Suffrage

What is women's suffrage?

Women's suffrage is the right of women to vote and to have a position in an elected office (e.g. become mayor).

When did women get the right to vote?

You may think that women have always had the right to vote, but this is far from the truth. Up until the 1900s, most democracies throughout history only allowed men to vote. This includes the democracies of Ancient Greece, the Roman Republic, and early democracies in Britain and the United States.

In the United States women were not allowed to vote until the passage of the 19th amendment in 1920. That's less than 100 years ago. In some countries the date was much later, such as in Kuwait where women weren't given the right to vote until 2005. In other countries the date was earlier, as in New Zealand which pioneered women's suffrage in 1893.

Kate Sheppard, the driving force behind New Zealand's women's suffrage movement, was not a native New Zealander. Like many who lived in the country at the time, she was born in England. Sheppard was born in Liverpool, in 1847. Her given name was Catherine, but she preferred Kate.
Young Kate grew up in London and in Scotland and Ireland. A very smart child, she learned quickly and absorbed knowledge in a variety of subjects, including languages, science, arts, and law. She also believed strongly in the Christian religion.
Kate's father, a clerk, died when Kate was 15. Three years later, in 1868, Kate's mother took the children, which were Kate and a sister and two brothers, to far-away New Zealand, where they settled in Christchurch, on the country's South Island, to live with Kate's older sister, Marie.

At 24, Kate married Walter Sheppard, who was a grocer. They had a son, Douglas, in 1880. Kate was active in Trinity Congregational Church and got involved with the temperance movement. This movement worked towards banning alcohol. It was their belief that to prevent the men from literally, drinking away their problems, it would allow more of their paycheques to be brought home for needs such as food.
The WCTU (which stood for the same as the American version except for the W, which stood for Women's, not Woman's) grew in membership and influence in the next several years, and the members began to campaign not only for more laws around banning alcohol, but also laws providing women the right to vote. The group believed that the anti-alcohol laws and granting women the right to vote went hand-in-hand. Give women the right to vote, so that they can help effect change through laws to better support ALL citizens, especially women.
In 1891, the WCTU presented to Parliament a petition for allowing women the vote. The petition was signed by 9,000 women. A second petition the following year had 19,000 signature. The movement was growing. The women's suffrage movement had many male supporters as well, among them Prime Minister John Ballance.
Sheppard helped the suffrage movement gain strength around the country, visiting other cities and speaking out in favor of her cause. One of her more famous quotes is this: "We are tired of having a “sphere” [placed] out to us, and of being told that anything outside that sphere is 'unwomanly'."
A petition for women's suffrage was delivered to Parliament in 1893 with 32,000 signature, many of them men's.
That same year, Parliament voted to give women the vote. Prime Minister Richard Seddon wrote a personal telegram to Sheppard, congratulating her on her efforts. Lord Glasgow, the Governor-General, gave Sheppard the pen with which he, as the English Queen's representative in New Zealand, had signed the women's suffrage bill into law. 
Sheppard didn't exactly retire after helping to bring women the right to vote in New Zealand In fact, she began traveling a lot throughout England, Canada, and the United States, helping fire up support for women's suffrage in those countries.
Civil Rights
African-American Civil Rights Movement

The African-American Civil Rights Movement was an ongoing fight for racial equality that took place for over 100 years after the Civil War (about the 1860s). Leaders such as Martin Luther King, Jr., Booker T. Washington, and Rosa Parks paved the way for non-violent protests, which led to changes in the law. When most people talk about the "Civil Rights Movement" they are talking about the protests in the 1950s and 1960s that led to the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

Background

The Civil Rights Movement has its background in the abolitionist movement before the Civil War. Abolitionists were people that thought slavery was morally wrong and wanted it to come to an end. Before the Civil War, many of the northern states had outlawed slavery. During the Civil War, Abraham Lincoln freed the slaves with the Emancipation Proclamation. After the war, slavery was made illegal with the thirteenth amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

Segregation and the Jim Crow Laws

After the Civil War, many southern states continued to treat African-Americans as second-class citizens. They implemented laws that kept black people separate from white people. These laws became known as Jim Crow laws. They required separate schools, restaurants, restrooms, and transportation based on the color of a person's skin. Other laws prevented many black people from voting.


Early Protests

In the early 1900s, black people began to protest the Jim Crow laws that southern states were applying that allowed governments to segregate races. Several African-American leaders such as W.E.B. Du Bois and Ida B. Wells joined together to found the NAACP in 1909. Another leader, Booker T. Washington, helped to form schools to educate African-Americans in order to improve their status in society.

The Movement Grows

The civil rights movement gained momentum in the 1950s when the Supreme Court ruled that segregation in schools was illegal in the case of Brown v. Board of Education. Federal troops were brought in to Little Rock, Arkansas to allow the Little Rock Nine to attend a previously all white high school.

Major Events in the Movement

The 1950's and early 1960's brought about several major events in the fight for the civil rights of African-Americans. In 1955, Rosa Parks was arrested for not giving up her seat on the bus to a white passenger. This sparked the Montgomery Bus Boycott which lasted for over a year and brought Martin Luther King, Jr. to the forefront of the movement. King led a number of non-violent protests including the Birmingham Campaign and the March on Washington.

Civil Rights Act of 1964

In 1964, the Civil Rights Act was signed into law by President Lyndon Johnson. This act outlawed segregation and the Jim Crow laws of the south. It also outlawed discrimination based on race, national background, and gender. Although there were still many issues, this law gave the NAACP and other organizations a strong base on which to fight discrimination in the courts.

Voting Rights Act of 1965

In 1965, another law was passed called the Voting Rights Act. This law said that citizens could not be denied the right to vote based on their race. It outlawed literacy tests (a requirement that people be able to read) and poll taxes (a fee that people had to pay to vote).

The Magna Carta
The “Great Charter”

On the 19 June 1215 at Runnymede King John signed the Magna Carta. (This means Great Charter.)
It was the first official document stating that a King had to follow the laws of the land and it guaranteed the rights of individuals against the wishes of the King. This meant people couldn't be arrested, imprisoned, or have their possessions taken away without a reason. If they went to trial, there had to be some sort of group (like a jury) made up of his peers who would listen to evidence and decide on the person’s fate from there. This laid the way for the idea of “trial by jury,” which means people are tried by their peers and guaranteed the civil rights of the individual.
The Magna Carta established the rule or idea that the people of England (at this stage represented by the Barons) could limit the power of a King, if he was doing things that were not good for the country.

Background

John became king in 1199 when his brother, Richard the Lionheart, died without any children. John had a bad temper and could be very cruel. He was not liked by the English Barons.

John also had to deal with a lot of issues while he was king. He was constantly at war with France. To fight this war he placed heavy taxes on the Barons of England. He also angered the Pope and was excommunicated from the church.

The Barons Rebel

By 1215, the barons of northern England had had enough of John's high taxes. They decided to rebel. Led by Baron Robert Fitzwalter, they marched on London calling themselves the "army of God". After taking London, John agreed to negotiate with them.



Signing the Magna Carta

King John met the barons on June 15, 1215 at Runnymede, a neutral site just west of London. Here the barons demanded that King John sign a document called the Magna Carta guaranteeing them certain rights. By signing the document, King John agreed to do his duty as King of England, upholding the law and running a fair government. In return, the barons agreed to stand down and surrender London.

Civil War

It turns out that neither side had any intention of following the agreement. Not long after signing, King John attempted to reverse the agreement. He even had the Pope declare the document "illegal and unjust". At the same time, the barons didn't surrender London.

Soon the country of England was facing civil war. The barons, led by Robert Fitzwalter, were supported by French troops. For a year the barons fought King John in what is called the First Barons' War. However, King John died in 1216, putting a quick end to the war.

Details of the Magna Carta

The Magna Carta was not a short document. There were actually 63 clauses in the document outlining a variety of laws that the barons wanted the King to enforce. Some of the rights these clauses promised included:

  Protection of church rights
  Access to swift justice
  No new taxes without the Barons' agreement
  Limitations on feudal payments
  Protection from illegal imprisonment
A council of 25 Barons who would insure that King John followed the laws

Legacy

Although King John did not follow the agreement, the ideas put forth in the Magna Carta became lasting principles of liberty to the English. Three of the clauses are still in force as English law including the freedom of the English Church, the "ancient liberties" of the City of London, and the right to due process.

The ideas of the Magna Carta also influenced the constitutions and development of other countries. The American colonists used the rights guaranteed in the document as a reason to rebel and form their own country. Many of these rights are written into the United States Constitution and the Bill of Rights.


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