Starkville Daily News

Marker will honor civil rights activist Fannie Lou Hamer

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INDIANOLA, Miss. (AP) — A historical marker in Mississipp­i will commemorat­e the legacy of civil rights activist Fannie Lou Hamer.

Research for the project was led by a Mississipp­i Valley State University student and a professor who taught him, the Greenwood Commonweal­th reported.

C. Sade Turnipseed is an associate professor of history, and 17-year-old Nigerian native Brian Diyaolu took her public history course during the fall semester. They recently received approval from the Sunflower County Board of Supervisor­s to place the Hamer sign in front of the county courthouse. It will be unveiled during a ceremony March 27.

Students in Turnipseed’s course are assigned a historical topic, and Diyaolu’s was Hamer. He said he wrote three drafts of the historical marker’s narrative before pitching the idea to the supervisor­s. He said other students helped him edit the narrative and prepare the presentati­on.

Hamer was born in Montgomery County, Mississipp­i, to sharecropp­ers on Oct. 6, 1917.

In October 1962, Hamer was escorted by Charles Mclaurin and other Student Nonviolent Coordinati­ng Committee members when she made her first attempt to register to vote at the Sunflower County Courthouse. At the time, Mississipp­i and other states had roadblocks, such as literacy tests, to prevent African Americans from voting.

At the 1964 Democratic National Convention, on behalf of the Mississipp­i Freedom Democratic Party, Hamer testified about resistance she and others faced. She famously said she was “sick and tired of being sick and tired.”

A year later, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which prohibited racial discrimina­tion in voting.

Hamer was 59 when she died of cancer in 1977.

“She was a beacon of light,” Turnipseed said. “Her fight ... enabled all Americans the right to register to vote. That’s why we’re putting the marker there — because it took so much courage for a woman to do this.”

 ??  ?? In this Sept. 17, 1965 file photo, Fannie Lou Hamer, of Ruleville, Miss., speaks
Washington after the House of Representa­tives rejected a challenger to the 1964 election of five Mississipp­i representa­tives. (AP Photo/william J. Smith, File)
In this Sept. 17, 1965 file photo, Fannie Lou Hamer, of Ruleville, Miss., speaks Washington after the House of Representa­tives rejected a challenger to the 1964 election of five Mississipp­i representa­tives. (AP Photo/william J. Smith, File)

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