The NAACP in the 1930's
During the 1930's the NAACP worked on several issues despite the limitations which the Great Depression made on contributions from African Americans and foundations. They would work successfully against discrimination in Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal programs, segregated southern schools and develop a coterie of African American lawyers to pursue their cases.
This path examines some of the developments in the 1930's.
This path examines some of the developments in the 1930's.
Begin this path: The NAACP in the 1930's
- WW becomes Secretary of the NAACP
- The NAACP in the Great Depression
- Attempts to Change the Organization in the 1930's
- The Departure of W.E.B. Du Bois in 1934
- The NAACP Develops a Legal Defense Team
- The Campaign Against Segregated Professional and Graduate Schools
- The NAACP and School Inequality
- The NAACP and the New Deal
- Walter White, the NAACP and the Marian Anderson Concert at the Lincoln Memorial 1939
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