To support and coordinate this voluntary movement, the Association (NAACP) Ella Baker for the Advancement of Colored People at the Show University of Raleigh, North Carolina, from 16th to 18th April 1960 held a meeting It was. There is establishment of Student Nonviolence Coordination Committee (SNCC). The first president was Michael Berry's college student in Tennessee State and a political activist Nashville.
We already know that SNCC and "Snick" are working hard to cancel the lunch counter by a non-violent confrontation, but it has only achieved a certain degree of success. In May 1961, SNCC expanded its focus to support local voter registration and public offering of abolishment of apartheid
The highest point of that effort appeared in the Mississippi summer project in 1964, often called "free summer". Hundreds of black-and-white college volunteers participated in bold activities of the Mississippi State SNCC staff and local civil rights activists and registered the first thousands of black voters in the state. Especially this effort got nationwide attention when the three SNCC staff in Mississippi State, Michael H. Schwerner in New York and Andrew Goodman were killed by White supremacists.
From autumn to winter in 1964/65, the SNCC experienced internal confusion. As a result of this development, in 1966 May John Lewis chairman replaced Stockley Kathy. Soon white activists began to leave the SNCC
This trend increased when Hubert "rap" Brown, an radical and controversial Black Self Defense advocacy group, became the leader of SNCC in May 1967. A year later, Rap Brown led the SNCC to become a public alliance with Panthers.
The alliance continued only until July 1969, but the damage caused was irrevocable. The SNCC 's annual income sharply declined due to the exile of Caucasians. The local direct action grassroots project has been shrunk. By 1970, SNCC lost 130 employees and most of its branches. Finally, in December 1973, SNCC no longer existed as an organization.
Claybone Carson, fighting: SNCC and the awakening of blacks in the 1960's (Cambridge: Harvard Press, 1981); Emily Stopper, Student Nonviolence Coordination Committee: Growth of radicalism in civil rights groups (New York: Carlson Kevern Verney, American Black People's Rights (New York: Ratlitch, 2000); SNCC's Howard Jin: New Abolishist (Cambridge: Southern End Press, 2002)
The Student Nonviolence Coordination Committee (SNCC), also known as the National Student Coordination Committee (since 1969), is a political organization playing a central role in the civil rights movement in the 1960s. As a non-violent non-ethnic advocacy group, reflecting the tendency of black behaviorism in the country, it required greater combat capability in the latter ten years. Utilizing the success of Southern University's towns, student nonviolence coordination committee was established in Raleigh, North Carolina in early 1960, and black students refused to leave the restaurant, and based on their ethnicity, was denied. This form of non-violent protest action gained public attention to the SNCC and despised white ethnic discrimination in the south. In the coming years, SNCC strengthened the efforts of the community organization and in 1961 supported free ride. It was held in Washington in March 1963, and I was deeply moved by the Civil Rights Act (1964).
The Student Nonviolence Coordination Committee (SNCC) was founded at the University of North Carolina on February 1, 1960. The committee was formed by black college students with the help of activists Elabaker. Initially, SNCC followed the nonviolent teaching of pastor James Lawson and the peaceful protest action of Dr. Martin Luther King. In 1966, Stockley Cathy was elected the president of the organization. His more extreme and anti-white agenda is in violation of the Commission's original mission. After Stokley left the committee, Hurbert "Rap" Brown became the leader of the SNCC in May 1967, and Brown also established an alliance between SNCC and Panthers, keeping white people away. In July 1967, the SNCC's annual income sharply declined as white members were expelled. In 1970, SNCC lost all 130 employees and most of its branches. By 1973, the Student Nonviolence Coordination Committee ceased to exist.