Jonathan Daniels Center for Social Responsiblity: Fair Housing Act
Introduction
Text-to-speech Audio
Images
Backstory and Context
Text-to-speech Audio
Meanwhile, while a growing number of African-American and Hispanic members of the armed forces fought and died in the Vietnam War, on the home front their families had trouble renting or purchasing homes in certain residential areas because of their race or national origin.
In this climate, different organizations lobbied for new fair housing legislation to be passed. In early April 1968 the bill passed the U.S. Senate and then went too the House of Representatives. Congress had already rejected two earlier versions of the law, and the 1968 Act seemed destined for a similar fate. However, on the day of Senate vote on April 4, the civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee.
Amid a wave of emotion—including riots, burning and looting in more than 100 cities around the country—President Lyndon b. Johnson increased pressure on Congress to pass the new civil rights legislation. After a strictly limited debate, the House passed the Fair Housing Act on April 10, and President Johnson signed it into law the following day.
Sources
Adams, Michelle. "The Unfulfilled Promise of the Fair Housing Act." The New Yorker April 11th 2018.
History.com Editors. Fair Housing Act, History. September 12th 2018. Accessed July 16th 2020. https://www.history.com/topics/Black-history/fair-housing-act.