Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Darkness Made Visible: The True Story of Harry T. Moore. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 10 page discussion of the life and accomplishments of this amazing man. Considered to be the first black man to die in the Civil Rights movement, Moore would stand up and be heard in a time when few others would dare. He was instrumental in enacting educational change as well as in a number of other social arenas. He would ultimately pay the price, however. Moore and his wife were killed by a carefully-placed bomb on Christmas night in 1951. Moore’s legacy, however, continues to live on into today. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPcivMor.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Names like Martin Luther King, Rosa Parks, and Malcolm X are forever etched into out consciousness as being those of major players in the Civil
Rights movement of the middle part of the twentieth century. As important as these players are, however, they were preceded in time by yet another name, that of Harry
T. Moore. Moore is considered to be the first black man to die in the Civil Rights movement. He was, in fact, an integral link in the civil rights
movement of the mid twentieth century. Few, however, recognize his name. Never-the-less, his gruesome murder would mark the beginning of one of the most turbulent periods of our
history. This period, and the efforts of players like Harry T. Moore, would result in phenomenal changes to the status quo in the United States. Moores efforts would
couple with that of such notables as Martin Luther King and John F. Kennedy to forever change the face of American race relations.
Many relate Moores relative anonymity to the timing of his death (Morgan, 2000). Moores life, and that of his wife, was taken with a bomb explosion on Christmas night
in 1951 (Green, 1999). Ironically, this was also the night of their twenty-fifth wedding anniversary (Morgan, 2000). The date was monumental in other regards as well. Within
three years the U.S. Supreme Court would order the desegregation of American schools. Brown verses the Board of Education would have many short and long term impacts not only
to the countrys educational system but to culture at large. Heard by the Court in the 1954, Brown verses Board of Education tried the legalities of segregation in the
...