The compromise that occurred after the sit-ins was one of national effects.  The most basic compromise was the one that eventually led to the end of the sit-ins.  The police tried to end the sit-ins, but it took a year for a compromise to take place.  One year and 50,000 protesters later, the students stopped their sits.  They felt their point was made, and more protests were going on elsewhere.  The compromises didn't stop there, though.

    People throughout the nation felt the shock wave caused by the sit-ins.   Other people started taking different approaches to Civil Rights.  People like Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Malcom X also participated in Civil Rights movements.

    The Civil Rights Movement after the sit-ins was a compromise in itself.  It was one of the biggest unofficial compromises in American history.  The simple acts of protesters led to people realizing that all people needed to be treated equal.  Millions have been affected by the compromise helped by the Greensboro Sit-ins.