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Since the city's founding in 1871, African American citizens of
Birmingham have organized for equal access to justice and public
accommodations. However, when thousands of young people took to the
streets of Birmingham in the spring of 1963, their protest finally
broke the back of segregation, bringing local leadership to its
knees. While their parents could not risk loss of jobs or life,
local youth agreed to bear the brunt of resistance by law
enforcement and vigilantes to their acts of civil disobedience. By
the fall, even youth who did not participate in the Children's
Movement gave all for the struggle when a bomb placed in the 16th
Street Baptist Church exploded and killed four girls.
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