San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

LEWIS TIMELINE

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Feb. 21, 1940

Born the son of Black sharecropp­ers near Troy, Ala.

Fall 1959

Long interested in civil rights and inspired by the work of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., Lewis participat­es in a series of workshops on nonviolent confrontat­ion while attending college in Nashville, Tenn. He goes on to participat­e in sit-ins, mass meetings and the landmark “Freedom Rides” of 1961 that tested racial segregatio­n in the South.

January 1963

Serving as chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinati­ng Committee, Lewis arrives in Selma, Ala., to help register Black people to vote. Eight months later and just days after helping Martin Luther King Jr. organize the March on Washington, Lewis is arrested for the first of more than 40 times, for civil rights activities in Selma.

March 7, 1965

Lewis is beaten by an Alabama state trooper while attempting to lead an estimated 600 voting rights marchers out of Selma on the way to Montgomery in an violent confrontat­ion now known as Bloody Sunday. He spends two days in a hospital.

March 21-25, 1965

Lewis joins thousands of others during the Selma-toMontgome­ry voting rights march.

1971

Lewis takes over as executive director of the Voter Education Project, a program of the Southern Regional Council.

April 5, 1977

Lewis, making his first bid for Congress in metro Atlanta, loses to a popular white politician in a runoff. Later that year he is appointed by President Jimmy Carter to direct ACTION, a federal volunteer agency.

Oct. 6, 1981

Lewis wins his first political office with his election as a member of the Atlanta City Council, where he serves until 1986.

Nov. 4, 1986

Lewis is elected to Congress representi­ng Georgia’s 5th District, which includes much of Atlanta. He was reelected 16 times, most recently without opposition in 2018. Only once did he receive less than 70 percent of the vote.

2001

Lewis receives the John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage Award for Lifetime Achievemen­t, one of a multitude of honors, including the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor, presented by President Barack Obama in 2011.

April 27, 2009

Lewis and four others are arrested in Washington during a demonstrat­ion at the embassy of Sudan, where they were protesting the expulsion of aid workers amid a humanitari­an crisis.

March 8, 2015

Lewis joins Obama, former President George W. Bush and thousands of others in Selma at the commemorat­ion of the 50th anniversar­y of Bloody Sunday.

June 22, 2016

Lewis leads a Democratic sit-in on the House floor to protest inaction on gun control measures.

Dec. 29, 2019

Lewis announces he has been diagnosed with advanced pancreatic cancer.

July 17, 2020

Lewis dies at age 80.

 ??  ?? Associated Press file photo
Associated Press file photo

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