Edition |
1st ed. |
Description |
128 p. : ill. (some col.), col. map ; 24 cm. |
Series |
Civil rights movement
|
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (p. 115-125) and index. |
Contents |
The train from Chattanooga -- Jim Crow "justice" -- Death sentence -- Communist influence -- All the way to the Supreme Court -- Judge Horton's skepticism -- Bigotry on the bench -- Back to the high court -- The final trials -- Freedom. |
Indexed In: |
School Library Journal, December 2007 |
|
Booklist, November 2007 |
|
Horn Book, April 2008 |
|
Voice of Youth Advocates (V.O.Y.A.), December 2007 |
|
Multicultural Review, September 2008 |
Summary |
Explores how the unfair trials of nine African-American men, dubbed the Scottsboro Boys, who were unjustly accused of raping and beating two white women in 1931, became a turning point in the civil rights movement and changed the American justice system for the better. |
Audience |
1180 Lexile. |
|
Young Adult Follett Library Resources |
Study Program |
Accelerated Reader AR MG RL 9.2 4.0 119290 852 |
Subject |
Scottsboro Trial, Scottsboro, Ala., 1931.
|
|
Trials (Rape)
|
|
African Americans -- Civil rights -- History.
|
ISBN |
1599350580 |
|