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  1. Bull Connor
    Birmingham, Alabama public safety commissioner during the Civil Rights Movement

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  1. Mar 11, 1973 · BIRMINGHAM, Ala., March 10 (AP) — Eugene Connor, the Birmingham Police Commissioner who used dogs and fire hoses to break up civil rights demonstrations in the early nineteen‐sixties, died here...

  2. Quick Facts. Significance: Staunch segregationist. Known for his use of police dogs and fire hoses to quell the Civil Rights demonstrations in 1962-1963. Place of Birth: Selma, Alabama. Date of Birth: July 11, 1897. Place of Death: Alabama. Date of Death: March 10, 1973. Place of Burial: Birmingham, Alabama. Cemetery Name: Elmwood Cemetery.

  3. historylearning.com › civil-rights-america › bull-connorBull Connor - History Learning

    Bull Connor is remembered for his opposition to the Civil Rights Movement during his time as Commissioner of Public Safety in Birmingham, Alabama. His aggressive policies towards black protesters epitomised the institutionalised racism that plagued the South. Born on 11 July 1897, Theophilus ‘Bull’ Connor’ grew up in the city of Selma in Alabama.

  4. Nov 8, 2023 · Eugene “BullConnor A successful politician who held a variety of public offices over four decades, Eugene “BullConnor (1897-1973) is primarily remembered today as an icon of racial intolerance.

  5. May 7, 2009 · 374 subscribers. Subscribed. 2K. 473K views 14 years ago. National History Day documentary on Bull Connor, Birmingham's Commissioner of Public Safety, whose use of police dogs and fire hoses on...

  6. ( b. 11 July 1897 in Selma, Alabama; d. 10 March 1973 in Birmingham, Alabama), ardently segregationist commissioner of public safety for Birmingham, Alabama, whose tactics—most notably the use of fire hoses and police dogs against peaceful demonstrators—so shocked the nation that they ultimately aided the passage of civil rights legislation.

  7. www.wikiwand.com › en › Bull_ConnorBull Connor - Wikiwand

    Theophilus Eugene " Bull " Connor (July 11, 1897 – March 10, 1973) was an American politician who served as Commissioner of Public Safety for the city of Birmingham, Alabama, for more than two decades. A member of the Democratic Party, he strongly opposed the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s.

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