1966 photo Civil Rights Batesville Mississippi “March Against Fear”

$75.00 CAD

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UPI press photo of Civil Rights march being led by James Meredith, the day before it reached Jackson Mississippi.

Named the "March Again Fear" it was the the largest civil rights march in the history of the state. Among those participating was Martin Luther King Jr.

Title paper label glued on back:

CPM062501…..NEW YORK BUREAU
 
WET MARCH
 
BATESVILLE, MISSISSIPPI : James Meredith (center), flanked by friends James Capel (left), of Miss., and Private Leon Banks (right), of Seratoba, Miss., on leave from Fort Campbell, continues his “March Against Fear” in pouring rain June 25th. Meredith trudged 19 miles June 25th, on his 34th birthday
 
Credit (UPI PHOTO) 6/25/67 jhk
 

Also stamp on back stamp ‘PLEASE CREDIT UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL..'

Crease LR corner

9” X 7”

 

The March Against Fear was a major 1966 demonstration in the Civil Rights Movement in the South. Activist James Meredith launched the event on June 5, 1966, intending to make a solitary walk from Memphis, Tennessee, to Jackson, Mississippi via the Mississippi Delta, starting at Memphis's Peabody Hotel and proceeding to the Mississippi state line, then continuing through, respectively, the Mississippi cities of Hernando, Grenada, Greenwood, Indianola, Belzoni, Yazoo City and Canton before arriving at Jackson's City Hall. The total distance marched was approximately 270 miles over a period of 21 days. The goal was to counter the continuing racism in the Mississippi Delta after passage of federal civil rights legislation in the previous two years and to encourage African Americans in the state to register to vote. He invited only individual black men to join him and did not want it to be a large media event dominated by major civil rights organizations.

On the second day of his walk, June 6, 1966, Meredith was shot ... and was hospitalized for treatment… Meredith was a target for such rituals of attack because he had made highly publicized challenges to Mississippi's racial order, and had framed his walk as a confident repudiation of custom.

... Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. participated and continued to attract admiring crowds; his leadership and reputation brought numerous people out to see him, inspiring some to join the march. As the march headed south, the number of participants grew. Finally, an estimated 15,000 mostly black marchers entered the capital of Jackson on June 26, making it the largest civil rights march in the history of the state

WIKIPEDIA


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