Saturday, June 7, 2008

Selma to Montgomery - A March of Courage

I didn't know much about the Selma campaign and the march to Montgomery before coming on the trip. I has seen images from the Edmund Pettus Bridge and recollections of "Bloody Sunday", but not much more. The event gets short coverage in most textbooks (and in my class), and seems to be overshadowed by the March on Washington, the Montgomery Bus Boycott, and the Little Rock Nine. While those events are all so crucial to the movement, the Selma to Montgomery March must not be forgotten - and receive equal billing.

I retraced the march in reverse, from Montgomery to Selma. The first thing that struck me was the length - over 50 miles. I didn't realize the impact of arriving at the end point until I stepped on the state capitol grounds and got a small but indelible feel of what it would be like to address a crowd there. Walking across the Edmund Pettus Bridge was pretty powerful as well. To walk in the footsteps of those activists that truly put their lives in the line in 1965, knowing what happened there, ... it's hard to explain. I don't know if I could muster the moral courage it took to be a part of the movement.

I also had no idea that black tenant farmers were kicked off their land and lived in tent cities for almost two and a half years in Lowndes County, the middle of the march. It's another great example of ordinary people doing the extraordinary, a hallmark of the Civil Rights Movement.

Needless to say, I will be giving the march much more attention in class next year and beyond. The impact of the march - the Voting Rights Act of 1965 - cannot be ignored, and neither can the experiences and memories of the marchers.


3 comments:

Mike O. said...

Chuck:

If you're not on the road already, be sure to jump on the Natchez Trace Parkway as you go from Tupelo to Brice's Crossing. The Trace is a lovely drive, with a good many interesting waysides--including, as I recall, some old Confederate graves and a fragment of the original trace just north of Tupelo. (In fact, if you're looking for another grant proposal: Cover the 400+ miles from Natchez to Nashville. Key western battlefields from Vicksburg in the south to Franklin, Nashville, and Stones River on the north end, and an important insight into the economy of the antebellum South.)

Did you get any Ollie's Barbecue in Birmingham?

Mike Ostermeyer

SRVill said...

Chuck,

Between the blog, the pictures, and your on-line audio phone calls, it's like I am there!! What an incredible trip. Have a great rest of the week and I look forward to all the updates.

Travel safe.
Steve

Matt Montagne said...

CT-

I'm enjoying keeping up with you. Just caught up with all of your Gcast updates-fantastic stuff. This is a great sample of a 21st century digital learning/reflection journal. Good stuff here...I've enjoyed everything from the video, to the pictures, to the audio updates, to the blog posts.

The fountains, especially the civil rights era timeline fountain, at the Civil Rights museum looked fantastic.

As far as Milwaukee goes...the rains continue...

~Matt