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Works Cited

Primary Sources Baez, Joan, We Shall Overcome. Web. 2 Mar 2012. <http://beemp3.com/download.php?file=3251368&song=We Shall Overcome>. On my home Washington D.C. March page this song is located at the bottom of my page. I decided to add music after looking at last years winners. "Bill of Rights and Later Amendments." UShistory.org. Independence Hall Association, 2012. Web. 31 Mar 2012. <http://www.ushistory.org/documents/amendments.htm Amendment 24 is used on my Letters, Bills, and Amendments page. I copied the amendment word for word so it was correct on my website, not a summary. Bloody Sunday. 1964. Photograph. Collection of Amelia Boynton. A picture of Amelia Boynton is located on my website also. It was taken on Bloody Sunday after she had been gassed and beaten to the ground. Bloody Sunday. 1964. Photograph. Veterans of the Civil Rights- The People's Movement. This picture was taken before the authorities attacked the marching protesters. It is used on my Marching Introduction page to show that they werent doing anything wrong, just fighting peacefully for their rights. Boyle, Kevin. Arc of justice: a saga of race, civil rights, and murder in the Jazz Age. 1st ed. New York, New York: First Owl Books, 2004. Print.

Renaas 2 The authors note in this book helped me to decide what terminology to use. It also helped to decide if Negro should be capitalized or not. This is the authors opinion and I agree. It helps get the realism of this time period. Briggs, June. Telephone Interview. 23 Feb 2012. My grandma gave me information about riots that she witnessed even after the blacks did get their rights. Some whites were still out for blood. Civil Rights Act (1964). Photograph. www.ourdoucuments.gov. This documents picture is on my Letters, Bills, and Amendments page on my website. It shows the kind of bill, acts, and amendments that were passed because it is an act itself and it helped in the Civil Rights Movement. Civil Rights March on Washington. 193. Photograph. Library of Congress/infoplease, Washington D.C.. Web. 10 Feb 2012. On every page in the top right corner this picture appears. I chose it because it reflects my project very well; it shows marchers marching. Executive Order 9981. N.d. Photograph. Harry S. Truman Library and Museum This picture is the Executive Order 9981. I talk about it in my timeline and the picture is on the Letters, Bills, and Amendments page. King Jr., Martin Luther. "Letter from Birmingham Jail." Martin Luther King Jr. Online. Intellectual Properties Management, n.d. Web. 31 Mar 2012. <http://www.mlkonline.net/jail.html>. This is Martin Luther King Jr.s Letter from Birmingham Jail that I used on my Letters, Bills, and Amendments page. It is what he actually wrote not a summary.

Renaas 3 Library of Congress. Bloody Sunday. 1964. Photograph. Veterans of the Civil RightsThe People's Movement. On my website I have created a page for pictures and this picture is featured on it. This picture shows authorities beating on black marchers. Sometimes even white marchers who supported equal rights were seriously injured or killed. "March 22, 1988: Civil Rights Restoration ." Document Gallery. Web. 31 Mar 2012.<http://www.congressionaltimeline.org/100thcongress_pg1_03221988docs. htm>. This document is the Civil Rights Restoration Act. It shows another type and form of bill. It is on my Letters, Bills, and Amendments page. Manilow, Barry, "Let Freedom Ring." bee MP3. web. 20 Mar 2012. <http://beemp3.com/download.php?file=8582926&song=Let Freedom Ring>. This song is one of the songs marchers sang as they were marching. I used it on my Selma-to-Montgomery March page. Martin Luther King Jr., giving his "I have a dream" speech.. N.d. Photograph. Abbeville Press This picture is Martin Luther King Jr. giving his I Have a Dream speech at the Lincoln Memorial. I used it on my Washington D.C. March page. Mississippi Freedom Summer- 1964. 1964. Photograph. 1964. My timeline talked about the Freedom Summer. This picture shows kids on and loading the bus for their summer tour. Mississippi Freedom Summer-1964. 1964. Photograph. Veterans Civil Rights- The People's Movement.

Renaas 4 Registering to vote are two black citizens. This picture is used on my Marching to Conclusions page. Police Photo. Bloody Sunday. 1964. Photograph. Veterans of the Civil Rights- The People's Movement. Another picture featured on my website. I thought this showed just how far the authorities took their violence. Such violence included gassing, stoning, and clubbing all sizes of people to the ground; young and old. Voting Rights Act of 1965. N.d. Photograph. www.ourdoucuments.gov This is a picture on my Letters, Bills, and Amendments page. It is one of the bills and it was suggested to me to show the different bills and amendments that were passed.

Secondary Sources Brunner, Borgna, and Elissa Haney. "Civil Rights Movement Timeline." infoplease. Pearson Education, 2007. Web. 10 Feb 2012. <http://www.infoplease.com/spot/civilrightstimeline1.html> Timeline showed important dates and helped me create the timeline on my website. Cozzens, Liza. "The March on Washington." The Civil Rights Movement 1955-1965: Introduction. N.p., 22 June 1998. Web. 16 Dec 2012. <http://www.watson.org/~lisa/blackhistory/civilrights-55-65/marchwas.html>. To find more information to back up already found information I referred to this site. It tells about the March on Washington which is one of the two marches my project is based upon.

Renaas 5 Eyes on the Prize. 2006. Video. PBS. I learned some very interesting information that I used on my website from this video. It is filled with videos of real marchers. It shows all the hard work people put into the Washington March. "Selma-to-Montgomery March." We Shall Overcome. National Park Service, n.d. Web. 16 Dec 2011. <http://www.nps.gov/nr/travel/civilrights/al4.htm>. On this site, there is a history lesson. A lesson about the march that only lasted six blocks to the Edmund Pettus Bridge. It was supposed to end in Montgomery after starting in Selma. The marchers were attacked though.

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