See also: Black Panther Party; Charlotte Three; Congress of Racial Equality; "Death to the Klan" March; Fourteenth Amendment; Gays and Lesbians; Greensboro Sit-Ins; Ku Klux Klan; Lumbee Indians; National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; Pearsall Plan; Pupil Assignment Act; Radio Free Dixie; Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee; Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education; Wilmington Ten; Women.
Part i: Introduction; Part ii: Roots of Civil Rights Activism in North Carolina; Part iii: Brown v. Board of Education and White Resistance to School Desegregation; Part iv: Integration Efforts in the Workplace, Sit-Ins, and Other Nonviolent Protests; Part v: Forced School Desegregation and the Rise of the Black Power Movement; Part vi: Continued Civil Rights Battles in the State
In North Carolina and throughout the United States, African Americans have endured a long, turbulent, and sometimes violent struggle for social, political, and economic equality and justice. Segregation, born of slavery and descended from the black codes of the pre-Civil War South, was legal in the state from its embodiment in the North Carolina Constitution of 1868 to its undoing by the federal Civil Rights Act of 1964; de facto separation of the races and the legacy of racism have endured well beyond 1964. At practically every turn, the attempts of blacks to overcome an unjust status quo were met by white resistance and an unwillingness to change without the prodding of judicial authority or local activism. By the early 2000s, nevertheless, tremendous progress had been achieved.
In North Carolina the civil rights movement extends from the heady days following emancipation when black people first won political representation and the legal right to self-determination, through the struggles of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries when these initial gains were rolled back by white supremacy and the repressions of Jim Crow, to the small, grassroots movements of the 1940s and the landmark victories of the 1950s and 1960s. Even after the legal framework of segregation fell, however, its legacy was proved hard to dispel in practice, requiring regular interventions by the federal government, state legislators, and the courts. At every stage, African Americans led the way, not just at the federal and state level but also locally, one place and one issue at a time. Beginning in the 1960s and 1970s, American Indian people, women, LGBTQ+ people, and other groups struggled similarly for equal legal and social access in the state and the nation, with various levels of success. These movements continued through the final decades of the twentieth century, and in some regards they continue to the present day.