On March 7, 1965, the police attacked 525 civil rights demonstrators marched between Selma and Montgomery Alabama. The parade is to have the black people vote. Police used tear gas, riding a horse and rushing to the crowd, injuring more than 50 demonstrators. The day of the protest was named "Bloody Sunday", television and newspapers throughout the country were broadcasted throughout the United States, and Americans were very angry about how the authorities handle it. Even if people are on bloody Sunday, they are injured eight days after President Linden B on a bloody Sunday.
The three weeks of March 1965 celebrated the height of the modern civil rights movement, and eventually it was that he gained voting rights to Montgomery in Selma in March. On March 7, 1965, about 600 civil rights activists marched east of Selma's US route 80 on bloody Sunday. When state and local lawyers attacked them at Billy Club and torn the gas and sent them to Selma, they walked only 6 blocks to the Edmont Petas Bridge. Two days later, Martin Luther King (Jr.) led a "symbolic" parade to the bridge. Two days later, civil rights leaders called for court protection for a third full march from Selma to Montgomery State Capitol. Federal District Court Judge Frank M. Johnson, Jr. Ruled the demonstrators. Two weeks later Sunday, March 21, about 3,200 marcharies visited Montgomery who is sleeping in the field walking 12 miles a day. Their team has increased to 25,000 when arriving in Parliament on Thursday, March 25.
On March 7, 1965, a drastic change in the civil rights movement in Alabama province occurred, 600 peaceful demonstrators took part in Selma march to Montgomery, white police killed black rights activists I protested. Legislative enforcement of the 15th revision
March 7 - Bloody Sunday: Crown workers in Selma, Alabama go to Montgomery, starting with Selma, but they will be powered by Alabama State across the Edmund Petas Bridge. Police officers and police blockade was forcibly stopped. Many marchedes were injured. Began by James Bayville, the organized parade became a visual symbol of the Selma voting movement. August 6 - President Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act in 1965. Eliminate literacy taxes and other subjective voter tests that have wide responsibility for the loss of African-American rights in the southern states and individuals who use states and such discriminatory tests Provide voter registration of Federal Supervision in the voting area.