| Civil Rights Movement: Interactive Lesson on Equality and Justice. |
| Learn about key figures, events, and achievements of the Civil Rights Movement through engaging questions. |
Welcome to our History Lessons and Quiz series! Each lesson features 10 questions designed to test your knowledge while teaching you interesting historical facts through detailed explanations after every answer.
✊🏿 Keep Exploring the Civil Rights Movement – Free & Fun Resources!
Continue your journey into the struggle for equality with these trusted, free resources:
- Britannica – Civil Rights Movement – Trusted encyclopedia entries on leaders, events, laws, and legacy.
- Khan Academy – Civil Rights Movement – Video lessons on Brown v. Board, Montgomery, King, Malcolm X, and landmark legislation.
- National Archives – Civil Rights – Primary source documents, including the Civil Rights Act and Voting Rights Act (.gov domain).
- National Park Service – Civil Rights – Information on historic sites like the MLK Memorial, Selma, and the Lorraine Motel (.gov domain).
- Library of Congress – Civil Rights History Project – Oral histories, photographs, and manuscripts from the movement (.gov domain).
🕊️ Fun fact: Martin Luther King Jr. was the youngest person (age 35) to win the Nobel Peace Prize (1964). He donated the $54,000 prize money (about $440,000 today) to the civil rights movement. The Nobel committee recognized him for his nonviolent campaign against racial discrimination. He was assassinated four years later. Coretta Scott King, his widow, carried on his work and later led the campaign to establish his birthday as a federal holiday. President Ronald Reagan signed the holiday into law in 1983; it was first observed on January 20, 1986.







