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Movement Chronology:
from the Civil War to the Present
1865 | 1896 | 1919 | 1941 | 1960 | 1968

1865

Lincoln assassinated. Andrew Johnson becomes President.

1867–1877

Molly Maguires terrorize Mauch Chunk PA.

1869

Knights of Labor founded as secret society. Ulysses S. Grant, Republican President.

1873

Panic of 1873 begins Long Depression (1873-1879).

1877

 Great Railroad Strike. Socialist Labor Party founded. Rutherford B. Hayes, President. Last federal troops withdrawn from South. End of Reconstruction and beginning of Jim Crow era.

1881

Tuskegee Normal and Industrial School founded. International Working People’s Association (Black International) founded.
"Chicago Idea"—One Big Union. Manifesto of Chicago Socialist Revolutionary Club written by Johann Most.
Chester Arthur succeeds James Garfield as President.

1883

Supreme Court invalidates Civil Rights Act of 1875

1885

Grover Cleveland, President.

1886

Haymarket Riot. August Spies, Address to the court. American Federation of Labor founded by Samuel Gompers.

1889

Benjamin Harrison, President.

1890

Mississippi institutes poll tax and literacy law. NWSA and AWSA merge to form NAWSA, the National American Woman Suffrage Association.

1892–1893

World’s Columbia Exposition (Chicago)

1892

Peak year for lynchings. 789,000 immigrants. Ida B. Wells, Southern Horrors.

1893

Panic of 1893.
American Railway Union formed with Debs as president.
Grover Cleveland, President, again.

1894

Successful American Railway Union strike. Pullman strike. Debs jailed in Woodstock, Ill, dates his espousal of Socialism to this period.

1895

Booker T. Washington, Atlanta Exposition Address.

1896

Plessy v. Ferguson legalizes segregation.

1897

Social Democratic Party founded by Debs, absorbs American Railway Union.
William McKinley, President.

1898
Wilmington, NC "Race Riot." AKA The Wilmington Insurrection. An armed and organized gang of white Democrats deposed, assassinated, and confiscated the property of black and Republican elected leadership of Wilmington.

1900

Socialist Labor Party rejected by American Federation of Labor, attempts to form rival unions, then breaks up to become Socialist Party. Debs campaigns for president as Social Democrat.

1901

Socialist Party of America founded. MicKinley assassinated by loner with anarchist leanings, Leon Czolgosz. Theodore Roosevelt, President.

1903
Emmeline and Christabel Pankhurst form the Women's Social and Political Union in London. Beginning of militant suffragism.

1904

Debs campaigns for President as Socialist.

1905

W.E.B. DuBois founds Niagara Movement. Industrial Workers of the World founded. Debs, Address at Founding Convention. Women's Trade Union League organizes daily street meetings near factory gates at noon and closing time in New York City.

1906

DuBois, Niagara Address (We Claim Our Rights)

1908

Debs campaigns as Socialist. Race riot in Springfield, Ill. Suffragists begin open-air soapbox campaigns.

1909

Lincoln Emancipation Conference, precipitated by race riot, draws a prestigious mix of progressives and old abolitionists. They discuss founding a new organization to enforce civil rights for African Americans.
William Taft, President.

1910

National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) founded.

1911
Triangle Factory Fire, Manhattan, March 25. 146 dead due to locked doors and obstructions in upper story tenement garment factory. International Ladies Garment Workers Union.

1912

Debs campaigns as Socialist; receives 6% (897,011 votes); most successful Socialist campaign in U.S. history. Woodrow Wilson elected President. Alice Paul organizes the Congressional Union within NAWSA. The Progressive Party (T. Roosevelt) endorses woman suffrage.

 1916

 Marcus Garvey, Universal Negro Improvement Association. National Woman's Party founded by militants Alice Paul and Lucy Burns. Trained in London by the Pankhursts, they broke with NAWSA over their conciliatory tactics and state rather than federal orientation. In the same year, Carrie Chapman Catt, newly elected president of NAWSA, repudiated the states right platform and announced a "winning plan" for a federal amendment.

1917

 Bolshevik November Revolution. America enters World War I.

1918

Debs, Canton, OH speech. Arrested and sentenced to ten years in prison under Sedition Act. Statement to the Court.

1919

Bolsheviks form Russian Communist Party. Red Scare. Palmer Raids. Emma Goldman deported. J. Edgar Hoover forms FBI’s Radical Division. American Communist Party formed and immediately forced underground.
Red Summer: Beginning in Texas, race riots broke out across the country with the most violent occurring in Chicago and Washington DC, but also in Charleston, SC, Knoxville, TN, Omaha, NE and other places. In general they were the result of competition between blacks and whites over labor.

1920

Debs runs as Socialist for president while in prison. (919,000 votes).
Nineteenth Amendment ratified granting suffrage to women. Warren G. Harding elected president.

1921

U.S. Communist Party formed. Debs released.

1923

National Woman’s Party, led by Alice Paul, promotes ERA in Congress.

1929
Communist Party re-emerges as Communist Party of the United States, a member of Comintern (Soviet-led international Communist organization).
ca. 1934
Elijah Muhammad founds Nation of Islam.
1941
Dec. 8, Roosevelt asks Congress to declare war against Japan
1941-1945
American Communists pursue common anti-Nazi interests with US and make wartime accommodations to capitalism. During this period their membership climbs to all-time high of 60,000-80,000. However, as much as 30% turnover means that at any one time there are many more former Communists than active Communists in the US.
1947
CORE organized out of Fellowship of Reconciliation to desegregate interstate bus travel.
1949
Eleven leaders of Communist Party of the US are convicted of violating the Smith Act, which outlawed groups teaching and advocating the violent overthrow of the government.
1954
Brown v. Board of Education. Army-McCarthy Hearings.
1955
August 28: Emmett, Till, aged 14, is lynched for allegedly whistling at a white girl in a grocery store in Money, MS. A photo of the open casket makes national and international news.
Dec. 1: Rosa Parks provides catalyst for Montgomery bus boycott.
1957
Schools are integrated in Little Rock. Foundation of Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC). First March on Washington organized by Philip Randolph.
1959
Greensboro sit-ins.
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) founded. April 28: Robert Alan Haber and Sharon Jeffreys organize human rights conference which marks the debut of SDS. They invite the four instigators of the Greensboro sit-ins. Also present: James Farmer and Michael Harrington. May 13: "Black Friday" in Berkeley/Bay Area as police attack demonstrators outside San Francisco City Hall where members of HUAC are holding hearings on "Communist subversion" in Bay Area. Tom Hayden and Abbie Hoffmann, unbeknownst to each other, are both present and experience radicalization.
1961
Freedom Riders begin desegregating interstate buses. Beaten and jailed in Birmingham. King organizes Albany demonstration, antagonizes SNCC. Kennedy appoints President’s Commission on the Status of Women, chaired by Eleanor Roosevelt.
1962–1963
Massive demonstrations in Birmingham.:
March 7, 1962 A Cornell University student group invites Malcolm X of the Nation of Islam and James Farmer of CORE to debate on "separation vs. integration"
June 11-15, 1962 SDS gathers in Port Huron for national convention, produces Port Huron Statement.
1963
King, Letter from Birmingham Jail. March on Washington. King, I Have a Dream. 16th St. Baptist Church in Birmingham is bombed; four little girls are killed.
President’s Commission on the Status of Women
published. President Kennedy assassinated. Betty Friedan, The Feminine Mystique.
1964
Freedom Summer for the Mississippi Voter Registration Project.
March Malcolm X leaves Nation of Islam to form Organization for Afro-American Unity. Travels to Mecca.
April 3 Malcolm X, "The Ballot or the Bullet", speech delivered at Corey United Methodist Church, Cleveland.
July Civil Rights Act of 1964. Sex amendment to Title VII, job discrimination clause of Civil Rights Act, passed through efforts of Alice Paul and NWP.
4 August
Gulf of Tonkin incident provides Johnson with warrant to escalate the Vietnam War.
  Economic Research and Action Project (ERAP), led by Sharon Jeffries,.organizes in nine American cities. Cleveland and Swarthmore chapters emphasize radical group process. Peace Research and Education Project (PREP) organizes around issue of Vietnam War. Democratic National Convention: Delegates from the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party are denied a role in the Democratic Convention. Johnson elected President. SNCC staff retreat generates position paper on women in the organization.
  September Berkeley Free Speech Movement kicks off. Savio, Speech at Berkeley.
  December King receives Nobel Peace Prize.
1965
Malcolm X assassinated by members of Nation of Islam. King and SNCC speak out against Johnson’s Vietnam War policy. First anti-war demonstration in Washington organized by SDS. Tom Hayden goes to Hanoi. Watts riots. Casey Hayden and Mary King, Memo on Sex and Caste.
1966
Stokely Carmichael becomes leader of SNCC, initiating Black Power movement. Founding of NOW (National Organization for Women).
1967
Massive antiwar March on Washington. "Revolutionary Contingent" attempts to levitate Pentagon, marks appearance of Yippies. Summer of Love in San Francisco. CORE becomes separatist organization.
Shulamith Firestone and Pam Allen found New York Radical Women. Ti-Grace Atkinson elected president of NOW-New York.
Eldridge Cleaver, Political Struggle in America. Nixon elected President.
Consciousness raising developed by NYRW. Mary Daly publishes The Church and the Second Sex. First issues of Voice of the Women’s Liberation Movement; Notes from the First Year.
30 Jan
Tet offensive begins in Vietnam.
March Robert F. Kennedy enters presidential campaign. On March 31, Johnson declines to run.
April 3 April, King, I’ve Been to the Mountaintop. 4 April, King assassinated. 
  June Robert F. Kennedy is assassinated.
  Aug Democratic National Convention disrupted by widespread demonstrations. Johnson vice president Hubert Humphrey nominated.
1969
Indictment of Chicago Eight. SDS merges with Progressive Labor Party. Weathermen launch Days of Rage in Chicago.
Founding of Redstockings out of breakup of NYRW. Ti-Grace Atkinson leaves NOW to form New York Radical Feminists. National Association for the Repeal of Abortion Laws (NARAL) founded. Shirley Chisholm, For the Equal Rights Amendment.
1970
Kent State massacre. Invasion of Cambodia.
Firestone publishes The Dialectic of Sex. Kate Millett publishes Sexual Politics. Newsweek runs cover story on feminism (16 March). Ladies Home Journal sit-in, 19 March, results in August supplement on feminism. Party of NOW members from Pittsburgh disrupt Senate hearing with demands for action on ERA. Rita Mae Brown resigns from NOW-NY over issue of lesbianism.
Chicago Seven acquitted of conspiracy charges, five members convicted on incitement charges (later overturned).
1971
Jane Collective begins performing illegal abortions in Chicago. Lorraine Rothman invents the Del-Em, a safe, cheap suction device for early abortions.
1972
1st issue of Ms. (July). Congress passes the ERA. Congress passes Title IX banning sex discrimination in federally assisted educational programs.
1973
Members of Jane collective arrested. Roe v. Wade and Doe v. Bolton result in making abortion constitutional. First publication of Our Bodies, Our Selves. Mary Daly publishes Beyond God the Father.
Heide, For the Revolution: Tomorrow is Now. 
1974
First conference on "Women and the Environment." Passage of Equal Credit Opportunity Act
1975
Kathie Sarachild and Carol Hanisch publish Feminist Revolution, attacking liberal feminism. End of early radical feminism. National Womens Health Network founded. Members of Rothman’s Feminist Womens Health Center arrested for practicing medicine without a license.
1978
Susan Griffin, Woman and Nature. Mary Daly, Gyn/Ecology.
1980-1981
Women’s Pentagon Actions (November 80-81, ecofeminist)
1980
Carolyn Merchant, The Death of Nature.
1984
Mary Daly, Pure Lust.
1989
Webster v. Sullivan returns abortion regulation to states. Interest in self-help abortion techniques revives briefly.