Article 5QTXS Voting rights veterans share lessons with new generation of activists: ‘Build on the foundation’

Voting rights veterans share lessons with new generation of activists: ‘Build on the foundation’

by
Carlisa N Johnson
from on (#5QTXS)

Freedom Summer registered hundreds of Black people to vote in Mississippi in 1964 in defiance of Jim Crow laws

In the early 1960s, Charles McLaurin served as a field secretary for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), laying the groundwork for a massive voter registration drive in Mississippi known as Freedom Summer. That historic summer of 1964, young people from across the country poured into the state to help register Black people to vote, a campaign that energized the US civil rights movement and exposed Mississippi's racial terrors.

In 1962, there was not a single Black elected official in the whole state and Mississippi only had about 5% of the Black population registered to vote," said McLaurin, flanked by his former SNCC colleagues Freddie Biddle and Hollis Watkins at a recent conference commemorating the organization's founding in 1960.

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