The March Continues
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Partners in Struggle the Legacies of Michael Schwerner, James Chaney and Andrew Goodman
Partners in Struggle The Legacies of Michael Schwerner, James Chaney and Andrew Goodman Study Guide Colleen Birchett , Ph.D. New York Conference United Church of Christ 5575 Thompson Road DeWitt, New York 13214 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This publication could not have come into being without the encouragement, guidance and patience of Rev. Freeman Palmer, Associate Conference Minister for Congregational Development New York Conference United Church of Christ. We wish to thank him for his contributions and suggestions for improving the manuscript. We also wish to acknowledge the outstanding contribution of Melinda Moore, graphic artist, who made the publication both accessible and visually appealing. –2– TABLE OF CONTENTS Acknowledgments . 2 Preface . 4 Introduction . 5 Background . 6 Bible Parallel . 8 Questions . 9 • For Review • For Discussion • For Reflection Side Bars • Ida B. Wells Barnett . 10 • James Cone . 11 Appendix • Resources for Further Study . 12 • Sample Lesson Plans . 15 • More Ideas . 17 • Participant Handout . 18 Bibliography . 21 End Notes . 22 –3– PREFACE IN MANY WAYS , A FRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY is a continuously unfolding mosaic of intri - cately connected human designs and patterns. Individual stories contribute to the dynamic whole. The result is an expression of the awesome creativity of God. That is the focus of this four-part study. This particular series features Americans of Euro - pean ancestry who partnered with African Americans in the fight for freedom and equality. It focuses on the intriguing beauty that these particular elements bring into this unfolding mosaic. The design of this guide allows readers to “exegete” the lives of John Brown, William Lloyd Garrison, Viola Liuzzo and three college students (Michael Schwerner, James Chaney and Andrew Goodman). -
The Attorney General's Ninth Annual Report to Congress Pursuant to The
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL'S NINTH ANNUAL REPORT TO CONGRESS PURSUANT TO THE EMMETT TILL UNSOLVED CIVIL RIGHTS CRIME ACT OF 2007 AND THIRD ANNUALREPORT TO CONGRESS PURSUANT TO THE EMMETT TILL UNSOLVEDCIVIL RIGHTS CRIMES REAUTHORIZATION ACT OF 2016 March 1, 2021 INTRODUCTION This is the ninth annual Report (Report) submitted to Congress pursuant to the Emmett Till Unsolved Civil Rights Crime Act of2007 (Till Act or Act), 1 as well as the third Report submitted pursuant to the Emmett Till Unsolved Civil Rights Crimes Reauthorization Act of 2016 (Reauthorization Act). 2 This Report includes information about the Department of Justice's (Department) activities in the time period since the eighth Till Act Report, and second Reauthorization Report, which was dated June 2019. Section I of this Report summarizes the historical efforts of the Department to prosecute cases involving racial violence and describes the genesis of its Cold Case Int~~ative. It also provides an overview ofthe factual and legal challenges that federal prosecutors face in their "efforts to secure justice in unsolved Civil Rights-era homicides. Section II ofthe Report presents the progress made since the last Report. It includes a chart ofthe progress made on cases reported under the initial Till Act and under the Reauthorization Act. Section III of the Report provides a brief overview of the cases the Department has closed or referred for preliminary investigation since its last Report. Case closing memoranda written by Department attorneys are available on the Department's website: https://www.justice.gov/crt/civil-rights-division-emmett till-act-cold-ca e-clo ing-memoranda. -
New Histories of the Civil Rights Era," Journal of Southern Histo‐ Ry, (November 2000), 843
Charles W. Eagles. Outside Agitator: Jon Daniels and the Civil Rights Movement in Alabama. Tuscaloosa and London: University of Alabama Press, 2000. xi + 335 pp. $24.95, paper, ISBN 978-0-8173-1069-1. Reviewed by George Baca Published on H-South (May, 2002) Up From Romanticism: New Histories of the On August 16, 1965, Tom Coleman, a ffty-two Civil Rights year old white Alabaman shot Jon Daniels, an Thirty-five years after the passage of the Civil Episcopal seminarian from New Hampshire. The Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of stories of these two men and the local historical 1965, scholars are gradually moving away from context of Lowndes County, Alabama--an impov‐ romantic narratives of the Movement to more ju‐ erished black belt agriculture area that remained dicious examinations of the history of African a hotbed of resistance even after the 1965 voting Americans' struggle for Civil Rights. Gone is the rights act--provide the plot and setting for Eagles' idealistic optimism that the passage of Civil Rights provocative narrative that sheds light not only on legislation would erase the color line. Instead, this Civil Rights activist, but also on the social con‐ scholars are beginning to explore how such legis‐ text that produced such intense reaction to inte‐ lation has redrawn the color line and reconstitut‐ gration throughout the South. His analysis, more‐ ed racial subordination through the principle of over, illuminates a local struggle for civil rights at racial equality.[1] The emergence over the past the same time that the Federal government was decade of this more critical reading of the Civil gradually consolidating the Movement within the Rights Era has led historians to turn their atten‐ bureaucratic institutions of the State. -
2016 Annual Report a Message from Morris Dees and Richard Cohen
2016 ANNUAL REPORT A MESSAGE FROM MORRIS DEES AND RICHARD COHEN WE REDOUBLED OUR WORK TO FIGHT HATE Anti-Muslim hate groups almost tripled in and seek justice in 2016, a year in which the pres- number – an increase fueled by Trump’s incen- idential campaign of Donald Trump energized a diary rhetoric, including his campaign pledge to growing white nationalist movement and engulfed bar Muslims from entering the United States. the country in a wave of xenophobia that threat- • Our Teaching Tolerance project reported a ened to reverse years of progress. In the face of ris- sharp uptick in the bullying and intimidation of ing far-right extremism, we fought for our coun- children whose races, nationalities or religions try’s highest ideals – exposing those who brought were targeted during the campaign. The Trump hate into the mainstream, helping teachers push Effect, based on our survey of 2,000 educators, back against bias in the classroom, and standing garnered national headlines and alerted the up in the courts for the exploited and the abused. country to the alarming trend. A second, post- Prior to the election, we documented the wide- election survey of more than 10,000 educators spread harassment and bullying of minority chil- reinforced the findings. We responded by pro- dren caused by a campaign that vilified their fami- viding teachers with strategies and resources lies on the basis of race, ethnicity or religion. And to help children see through stereotypes and after it, we alerted the country to an outbreak of reject bigotry. violence and intimidation faced by members of • After the election, we documented a spike in minority groups and the LGBT community. -
News Article "Mississippi Horror: a Doctor's Report"
~lJfOPSY ON RIGHTS CRUSADER )ff. W~"t, Mississippi HorrOrrr:,;:, But I wos disappolnted, too, .r I hecause I wouldn't ha.\'e a chance now 1o do something th 1 that rnl~ht help find the mur· r? A Doctor's Report ' 1 derers of those kids, Good· l rich, when he came on the .,._ phone, resoh·ed my amblva· il BY DAY1D 8PAIX, :'.\I.D. I was as surprised by the post· unteer for the Medical Com· t lent feelings for me. fj C09Yright 19'4, The Layman's Pren midnight call as I would have mittee for Human Rights. Reprinttcl bY Permission "Get d0\\'11 here anyway. g . been if I looked out the win· "Dave, can. you get dov,n Take the late plane. There's y The phone rang about 1 :30 dow and saw my ailing out here, right away?" something tunny g o i n g on a .m. I had just gone to sleep, board motor running a.round "To Mississippi?" about this business. I think r after a restless hour In bed by itself in the bay. "Immediately. The autopsy we may be able to arrange conjugating tour days of utter • • • for you to examine the bodies t failure to get my outboard for those three kids Is sched· THE OPERATOR said Jack· uJed fo r tomorrow, and the later. It may all be a Wild J motor running, and I walked son, Miss., was call!ng. goose chase, but let's try." i half-asleep down the dark hall attorneys for :Mrs. -
A True Deliverance: the Joan Little Case
Michigan Law Review Volume 79 Issue 4 1981 A True Deliverance: The Joan Little Case Michigan Law Review Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.law.umich.edu/mlr Part of the Civil Rights and Discrimination Commons, Criminal Law Commons, Law and Gender Commons, and the Law and Race Commons Recommended Citation Michigan Law Review, A True Deliverance: The Joan Little Case, 79 MICH. L. REV. 861 (1981). Available at: https://repository.law.umich.edu/mlr/vol79/iss4/34 This Review is brought to you for free and open access by the Michigan Law Review at University of Michigan Law School Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Michigan Law Review by an authorized editor of University of Michigan Law School Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. March 1981] Equality and Women~ Rights 861 A TRUE DELIVERANCE: THE JOAN LITTLE CASE. By Fred Har well. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. 1980. Pp. x, 298. $10.95. During the early morning hours of August 27, 1974, Joan Little, a black prisoner at the Beaufort County Jail in North Carolina, stabbed to death a white male jailer and fled the prison. Little claimed that she had acted in self-defense when the jailer sexually assaulted her. The prosecutor claims that the prisoner had lured the jailer into the cell as part of an escape plot. Little's defense became a cause celebre, attracting support from advocates of women's rights, civil rights, and prison reform. Ultimately, the jury acquitted Little of murder. However, it is this book's thesis that because the defense "failed in court to prove that Joan Little was not guilty, just as [the 862 Michigan Law Review [Vol. -
Mississippi Freedom Summer: Compromising Safety in the Midst of Conflict
Mississippi Freedom Summer: Compromising Safety in the Midst of Conflict Chu-Yin Weng and Joanna Chen Junior Division Group Documentary Process Paper Word Count: 494 This year, we started school by learning about the Civil Rights Movement in our social studies class. We were fascinated by the events that happened during this time of discrimination and segregation, and saddened by the violence and intimidation used by many to oppress African Americans and deny them their Constitutional rights. When we learned about the Mississippi Summer Project of 1964, we were inspired and shocked that there were many people who were willing to compromise their personal safety during this conflict in order to achieve political equality for African Americans in Mississippi. To learn more, we read the book, The Freedom Summer Murders, by Don Mitchell. The story of these volunteers remained with us, and when this year’s theme of “Conflict and Compromise” was introduced, we thought that the topic was a perfect match and a great opportunity for us to learn more. This is also a meaningful topic because of the current state of race relations in America. Though much progress has been made, events over the last few years, including a 2013 Supreme Court decision that could impact voting rights, show the nation still has a way to go toward achieving full racial equality. In addition to reading The Freedom Summer Murders, we used many databases and research tools provided by our school to gather more information. We also used various websites and documentaries, such as PBS American Experience, Library Of Congress, and Eyes on the Prize. -
Jim Reeb and the Longest March
Jim Reeb and The Longest March On the evening of March 9, 1965, Clark Olsen was walking alongside Jim Reeb, in Selma. It was just two days after an attempted march, between Selma and Montgomery, had turned bloody. Law-enforcement officials, declaring that the gathering was unlawful, had attacked the peaceful crowd. Three people died; many more were seriously injured. Both Reeb and Olsen, together with their colleague Orloff Miller, had traveled to Selma at the behest of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., who’d issued a general appeal: ...calling on religious leaders from all over the nation to join us on Tuesday [March 9th] in our peaceful, nonviolent march for freedom. By the 9th of March, however, the local federal judge—Frank Johnson—had not-yet authorized the 54-mile march between the two Alabama cities. Because of that, Dr. King led marchers (including Rev. Reeb) to the bridge where they knelt to pray before turning around. Later that night, Reeb decided to have dinner at Walkers Café (a local African-American restaurant) with Olsen and Miller. All three were Unitarian Universalist pastors. All three cared, a great deal, about social justice. They’d come to Selma to stand with other religious leaders and to march, in solidarity, with the people of Selma. As the three white pastors left the restaurant, they began to walk back to Brown Chapel AME Church (which was serving as the activists' headquarters in Selma). Reeb was still in town, despite his original plan to return home to Boston, because he wanted to stay one more day. -
Mississippi: Is This America? (1962-1964) ROY WILKINS
Mississippi: Is This America? (1962-1964) ROY WILKINS: There is no state with a record that approaches that of Mississippi in inhumanity, murder and brutality and racial hatred. It is absolutely at the bottom of the list. NARRATOR: In 1964, the state of Mississippi called it an invasion. Civil rights workers called it Freedom Summer. To change Mississippi and the country, they would risk beatings, arrest, and their lives. FANNY CHANEY: You all know what my child is doing? He was trying for us all to make a better living. And he had two fellows from New York, had their own home and everything, didn't have nothing to worry, but they come here to help us. Did you all know they come here to help us? They died for us. UNITA BLACKWELL: People like myself, I was born on this river. And I love the land. It's the delta, and to me it's now a challenge, it's history, it's everything, to what black people it's all about. We came about slavery and this is where we acted it out, I suppose. All of the work, all them hard works and all that. But we put in our blood, sweat and tears and we love the land. This is Mississippi. WHITE HUNTER: I lived in this delta all my life, my parents before me, my grandparents. I've hunted and fished this land since I was a child. This land is composed of two different cultures, a white culture and a colored culture, and I lived close to them all my life. -
January 17, 1979
THE OAlL’f DIARY OF PRESlbENT JIMMY CARTER LOCATlOH THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON, D.C. TIME From 1 TO 6:00 ’ The President received a wake up call from the White House signal board operator. 1 - 6:28 I The President went to the Oval Office. I 8:14 i 8:19 The President talked with Secretary of Energy James R. I Schlesinger, Jr, I 8:15 1 8:29 The President met with his Assistant for National Security . Affairs, Zbigniew Brzezinski. 9:lO 1 9:25 The President met with his Assistant for Domestic Affairs and Policy, Stuart E. Eizenstat. I 9:47 : 9:43 The President talked with his Assistant, Hamilton Jordan. I 10:30 10:30 The President met to discuss SALT with: Senator John C. Stennis (D-Mississippi) Frank B. Moore, Aassistant for Congressional Liaison Mr. Brzezinski / li:l5 1 lli30 The President met to discuss the relation between transpor- tation deregulation and the upcoming Teamsters contract with: Representative James J. Howard (D-New Jersey) Brock Adams, Secretary of Transportation James C. Free, Special Assistant for iongressional Liaison 11:45 i 11:50 The president met with: I Morris Dees, Attorney, Southern Poverty Law Center, I I Montgomery, Alabama Mr. Jordan The President talked with the First Lady. The President went to the Roosevelt Room. The President participated in a luncheon meeting with members of the Domestic Policy Staff. Fcr a list of attendees, see APPENDIX "A." The President returned to the Ovai Office. The President returned to the second floor Residence. THE DAlLYf DIARY OF PRESIDENT JIMMY CARTER DATE ttm. -
Emmett Till Cold Case Investigation and Training and Technical Assistance Program” Hosted by the Bureau of Justice Assistance
MARY JO GIOVACCHINI: Good afternoon everybody and welcome to today's webinar “Emmett Till Cold Case Investigation and Training and Technical Assistance Program” hosted by the Bureau of Justice Assistance. At this time, I'd like to introduce today's presenters: Elizabeth Griffith, Associate Deputy Director with the Bureau of Justice Assistance; Barbara Kay Bosserman, Deputy Chief of the Cold Case Unit and Senior Legal Counsel with the U.S. Department of Justice; LaShunda Williams, Supervisory Special Agent Civil Rights Division within the Bureau of—in the Federal Bureau of Investigation; and Gerri Ratliff, Acting Director for Community Relations Service within the Department of Justice. At this time I'm going to turn the presentation over to Betsi Griffith. ELIZABETH GRIFFITH: Good afternoon and thank you. I'm Betsi Griffith from the Bureau of Justice Assistance. I just want to lay out here the agenda for today. We're going to spend a little bit of time talking about the agency who's offering this opportunity, the Bureau of Justice Assistance where I work, talk a little bit about the particular opportunity including eligibility and grant-related information, and some background on how we review our applications to assist you in applying. This project has—is really building on the foundation of some tremendous work that's been happening across the Department over the last decade so I really want to turn it over to subject matter expertise that can kind of give you that context and are available to work with sites that receive funding or generally have an interest in this work so I wanted you all to be aware of that, and then we'll close with a few minutes around, you know, just logistics of both things that we've learned from experience you want to keep an eye out for as you apply as well as to talk briefly about our new Grants Management System, and answer question and—answer any questions you have. -
Expanding the Table for Racial Equity~
Putting Racism on the Table ~Expanding the Table for Racial Equity~ Civil Rights Learning Journey September 23 – 27, 2018 Memphis, TN Birmingham, AL Join us on a journey through history. Throughout the Putting Racism on the Table series, we will underscore the importance of understanding the history of race in America. You are invited to explore history first‐ hand on a learning journey through the South. This is an opportunity to build a deeper understanding of the movement for civil rights and racial justice in America. Over the course of 3.5 days, we will visit major museums, houses of worship that played significant roles in the activism of the 1960s, and sites of key protests. We will meet individuals who were leaders on the ground in the 1960s and those who are pushing for change today. Details Cost: $3,500/per person Included: All site fees; single‐occupancy hotel room each night; all meals (except Sunday & Tuesday dinners); transportation to Birmingham‐Shuttlesworth International Airport Not included: Airfare to Memphis & from Birmingham; transportation from Memphis International Airport; Sunday & Tuesday dinners Registration & Payment Deadline: July 2. Please see page 8 for our cancellation policy. Questions? Contact Rebekah Seder, [email protected] 1 Sunday, September 23, 2018 12:00‐5:00 pm: INDIVIDUAL ARRIVALS VIA MEMPHIS INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT (MEM) (Memphis, TN) Early arrivals have the option to enjoy a number of Memphis attractions. Music lovers, head to Beale Street for live Delta Blues, or tour Elvis Presley’s Graceland or Sun Records. Memphis may be known for its great BBQ, but there are a variety of southern dishes to enjoy close to the hotel.