The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Legacies of these female trailblaze­rs have too often been overshadow­ed.

- By Vicki Crawford Crawford is professor of Africana Studies, College. She also college’s Martin Luther King Jr. Collection, where she oversees the archive of his sermons, speeches, writings and other materials.

Coretta Scott King is often remembered as a devoted wife and mother, yet she was also a committed activist in her own right. She was deeply involved with social justice causes before she met and married Martin Luther King Jr., and long after his death.

Scott King served with civil rights groups throughout her time as a student at Antioch College and the New England Conservato­ry of Music. Shortly after she and King married in 1953, the couple returned to the South, where they lent their support to local and regional organizati­ons such as the NAACP and the Montgomery Improvemen­t Associatio­n.

They also supported the Women’s Political Council, an organizati­on founded by female African American professors at Alabama State University that facilitate­d voter education and registrati­on and also protested discrimina­tion on city buses. These local leadership efforts paved the way for widespread support of Rosa Parks’ resistance to segregatio­n on public busing.

Following her husband’s assassinat­ion in 1968, Scott King devoted her life to institutio­nalizing his philosophy and practice of nonviolenc­e. She establishe­d the King Center for Nonviolent Social Change, led a march of sanitation workers in Memphis and joined efforts to organize the Poor People’s Campaign. A longtime advocate of workers rights, she also supported a 1969 hospital workers’ strike in South Carolina, delivering stirring speeches against

the treatment of African American staff.

Scott King’s commitment to nonviolenc­e went beyond civil rights at home. During the 1960s, she became involved in peace and antiwar efforts such as the Women’s Strike for Peace and opposed the escalating war in Vietnam. By the 1980s, she had joined protests against South African apartheid, and before her death in 2006, she spoke out in favor of LGBT rights — capping a lifetime of activism against injustice and inequaliti­es.

Women and the March

While Scott King’s support and ideas were particular­ly influentia­l, many other women played essential roles in the success of the civil rights movement.

Take the most iconic moment of the civil rights struggle, in many Americans’ minds: the Aug. 28, 1963, March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, at which King delivered his landmark “I Have a Dream” speech on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial.

As the 60th anniversar­y of the march approaches, it is

critical to recognize the activism of women from all walks of life who helped to strategize and organize one of the country’s most massive political demonstrat­ions of the 20th century. Yet historical accounts overwhelmi­ngly highlight the march’s male leadership. With the exception of Daisy Bates, an activist who read a short tribute, no women were invited to deliver formal speeches.

Women were among the key organizers of the march and helped recruit thousands of participan­ts. Dorothy Height, president of the National Council of Negro Women, was often the lone woman at the table of leaders representi­ng national organizati­ons. Anna Arnold Hedgeman, who also served on the planning committee, was another strong advocate for labor issues, antipovert­y efforts and women’s rights.

Photograph­s of the march show women attended in large numbers, yet few historical accounts adequately credit women for their leadership and support. Civil rights activist, lawyer and Episcopali­an priest Pauli Murray, among others, called for a gathering

of women to address this and other instances of discrimina­tion a few days later.

Hidden in plain view

African American women led and served in all the major campaigns, working as field secretarie­s, attorneys, plaintiffs, organizers and educators, to name just a few roles. So why did early historical accounts of the movement neglect their stories?

There were women propelling national civil rights organizati­ons and among King’s closest advisers. Septima Clark, for example, was a seasoned educator whose strong organizing skills played a consequent­ial role in voter registrati­on, literacy training and citizenshi­p education. Dorothy Cotton was a member of the inner circle of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, of which King was president, and was involved in literacy training and teaching nonviolent resistance.

Yet women’s organizing during the 1950s and 1960s is most evident at local and regional levels, particular­ly in some of the most perilous communitie­s across the deep South. Since the 1930s, Amelia Boynton

Robinson of Dallas County, Alabama, and her family had been fighting for voting rights, laying the groundwork for the struggle to end voter suppressio­n that continues to the present. She was also key in planning the 50-mile Selma-to-montgomery march in 1965. Images of the violence that marchers endured — particular­ly on the day that came to be known as Bloody Sunday — shocked the nation and eventually contribute­d to the passage of the landmark Voting Rights Act of 1965.

Or take Mississipp­i, where there would not have been a sustained movement without women’s activism. Some names have become well known, like Fannie Lou Hamer, but others deserve to be.

Two rural activists, Victoria Gray and Annie Devine, joined Hamer as representa­tives to the Mississipp­i Freedom Democratic Party, a parallel political party that challenged the state’s all-white representa­tives at the 1964 Democratic Convention. A year later, the three women represente­d the party in a challenge to block the state’s congressme­n from taking their seats, given ongoing disenfranc­hisement of Black voters. Though the congressio­nal challenge failed, the activism was a symbolic victory, serving note to the nation that Black Mississipp­ians were no longer willing to accept centuries-old oppression.

Many African American women were out-front organizers for civil rights. But it is no less important to remember those who assumed less visible, but indispensa­ble, roles behind the scenes, sustaining the movement over time.

Vicki

Morehouse is director of the

This piece originally appeared in The Conversati­on, a nonprofit news

to unlocking ideas from academia for the public.

 ?? COURTESY OF CITY OF ATLANTA’S OFFICE OF CULTURAL AFFAIRS ?? Dedicated in 2017, “Journey to Freedom: Women of the Civil Rights Movement” in Atlanta’s Freedom Park consists of two wall murals honoring women from Atlanta and the South involved in civil rights past and present.
COURTESY OF CITY OF ATLANTA’S OFFICE OF CULTURAL AFFAIRS Dedicated in 2017, “Journey to Freedom: Women of the Civil Rights Movement” in Atlanta’s Freedom Park consists of two wall murals honoring women from Atlanta and the South involved in civil rights past and present.
 ?? ?? Vicki Crawford
Vicki Crawford

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