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When people think of sit-ins, they think Greensboro. But the movement didn’t start, or stop, there.
This episode looks at how the 1960 Greensboro sit-ins inspired Atlanta’s Black college students to challenge segregation in a city that called itself “too busy to hate.” From An Appeal for Human Rights to coordinated sit-ins across downtown, arrests under newly written laws, and the protests that landed Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in jail. Atlanta’s Student Movement reshaped the civil rights fight and even influenced a presidential election.
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Email: [email protected]
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By Victoria Lemos4.9
486486 ratings
When people think of sit-ins, they think Greensboro. But the movement didn’t start, or stop, there.
This episode looks at how the 1960 Greensboro sit-ins inspired Atlanta’s Black college students to challenge segregation in a city that called itself “too busy to hate.” From An Appeal for Human Rights to coordinated sit-ins across downtown, arrests under newly written laws, and the protests that landed Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in jail. Atlanta’s Student Movement reshaped the civil rights fight and even influenced a presidential election.
Want to support this podcast? Visit here
Email: [email protected]
Facebook | Instagram

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