Chattanooga Times Free Press

Atlanta renames street after civil rights icon Lewis

- BY BRINLEY HINEMAN

ATLANTA — Noting U.S. Rep. John Lewis’ life of “raw courage,” Atlanta officials renamed a street for the civil rights icon Wednesday.

Freedom Parkway, a four-lane conduit to the Carter Center, will now be called John Lewis Freedom Parkway.

“John Lewis is synonymous with freedom,” Atlanta City Council member Andre Dickens said when explaining why that particular street was chosen. Dickens sponsored the resolution — which the council unanimousl­y approved in December — to rename the street after Lewis.

In the 1960s, Lewis spent his adolescenc­e fighting discrimina­tion alongside other civil rights legends such as the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. He was the youngest civil rights leader who worked with King.

The congressma­n recounted his time with King and said he inspired him to get into “good trouble, necessary trouble.”

While in college, Lewis organized lunch counter sit-ins at restaurant­s in Nashville when he attended Fisk University. At 25, Lewis was beaten badly and suffered a concussion on “Bloody Sunday” while leading hundreds of protesters at Edmund Pettus

Bridge in Selma, Alabama. Images of his horrific beating were nationally televised; the brutality forced the country to recognize the discrimina­tion running rampant throughout the South.

In 1981, Lewis’ career in politics began with his election to the Atlanta City Council. Just five years later, he was elected to Congress.

“He has lived a life of raw courage,” Dickens said, calling Lewis the “conscience of Congress.”

Lewis encouraged the crowd to vote and called

“We are one people. We are one family. We will not give up on each other.”

– U.S. REP. JOHN LEWIS

voting “the most powerful nonviolent tool we have in a democratic society.”

Renaming the street is just one way the task force assembled by Dickens plans to pay respect to the congressma­n. Plans to paint a mural of Lewis in the Atlanta airport in January ahead of the Super Bowl are in the works, Dickens said.

Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms also presented Lewis with the Phoenix Award — the city’s highest honor — Wednesday for his work as both a local and national leader.

“We are one people. We are one family,” Lewis said. “We will not give up on each other.”

 ?? AP PHOTO BY BRINLEY HINEMAN ?? U.S. Rep. John Lewis stands in front of John Lewis Freedom Parkway Wednesday moments after the street name was unveiled in Atlanta.
AP PHOTO BY BRINLEY HINEMAN U.S. Rep. John Lewis stands in front of John Lewis Freedom Parkway Wednesday moments after the street name was unveiled in Atlanta.

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