Civil rights demonstrators marched from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama in 1965 to protest racial discrimination in voting. [The first march was attacked by police at the Edmund Pettus Bridge, injuring many protesters.] Martin Luther King Jr. led a second short march and obtained a court order. In March, over 25,000 people marched the full 54 mile route under federal protection, arriving in Montgomery to hear King speak. The marches increased national attention and prompted the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
19. The Vote in Selma
Of the 15,000 black people old enough to vote living in and around Selma, Alabama in 1961, only 130 were actually registered on
voter rolls. Beginning in 1963, civil rights groups like the Dallas County Voters League and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating
Committee (SNCC) began organizing voter registration drives in Selma and the surrounding regions, but their efforts were thwarted
by local law enforcement officers like Dallas County Sherriff James Clark, who, in the February 1965 photo above, instructs blacks
seeking to register to leave the county courthouse. When they refused, over 100 were arrested. Bettmann / Corbis
20. Bloody Sunday
In order to draw attention to their treatment by the police, local black leaders, in concert with the SNCC and the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference, called for a march from Selma to Montgomery, the state capital, where they would deliver a petition
protesting police brutality to the governor. Around 500 marchers set out on March 7, and they peacefully passed over the Edmund
Pettus Bridge, but were met by state troopers on the other side. Told to disband, the marchers tried to initiate a conversation, but
were met with nightsticks and tear gas instead. Bettmann / Corbis
21. Shocking
The attacks were captured by television and news cameras and the images of the angry, racist police beating on black marchers
appeared on newspapers and in magazines around the world. IN particular, photographs of this woman, later identified as Amelia
Boynton, a civil rights activist who had been beaten and gassed nearly to death, horrified all who saw them. Bettmann / Corbis
22. Federal Injunction
Though Martin Luther King, Jr. had been active in the voter registration drive in Selma in the weeks prior to the march, he missed
the events of Bloody Sunday, having chosen to preach to his congregation in Atlanta that day. Once its horrible outcome became
known, however, he returned immediately to Selma, where he issued a call for clergy and citizens from around America to join him
in organizing a second march. In order to ensure that this second march would not inspire another outbreak of violence, King sought
a court order that would prohibit the police from interfering, but instead the judge issued a restraining order forbidding them from
marching at all, until additional hearings could be held. In the photo above, a federal marshal reads the order to King and his
supporters. AP
23. Undeterred
Despite the court order, Dr. King and around 2,500 marchers walked across the Edmund Pettus Bridge on March 9, stopping at the
other side, where they held a short prayer session then went back, thereby obeying the court order which forbid them from walking
all the way to Montgomery, yet observing the spirit of the protest. Bettmann / Corbis
24. Dr. King and the Marchers
The events in Selma unfolded a mere two months after King had received the Nobel Peace Prize and less than a year after the
passage of the Civil Rights Act. He saw Selma as the perfect venue to maintain the momentum acquired by these gains and push
for voter registration for blacks all across the Deep South, where it was estimated that over 70 percent of African Americans lacked
the franchise. "We will bring a voting bill into being on the streets of Selma," he vowed. Here, King meets with local and national civil
rights leaders to discuss strategy for the marches. Flip Schulke / Corbis
25. Rapt
During the weeks of the conflict, King spoke frequently at Brown Chapel, where he gave sermons and eulogized two men killed in
the protests: the Reverend James Reeb, who had died after being savagely beaten after one rally and Jimmie Lee Jackson, shot by
a state trooper while trying to defend his family from attack..Flip Schulke / Corbis
26. The Third and Final March Begins
Ten Days after Bloody Sunday, a Montgomery judge lifted the injunction on the march and on March 21, Dr. King and approximately
5,000 marchers gathered at Brown Chapel to set out for the state capital. To ensure that no violence flared along the route,
president Johnson dispatched thousands of U.S. Army soldiers and federalized Alabama National Guardsmen to watch over the
marchers. AP
27. On the Road
The total distance of the march was 54 miles. It required five days of walking. Not all who set out made the entire journey: because
the route along Highway 80 narrowed to two lanes at one point, the judge ruled that only a limited number of marchers would be
allowed to walk for the two days the march passed through this narrow section. The rest of the marchers traveled back to Selma by
bus or Car.James Karales
28. Just Cause
At one point, the marchers passed through Lowndes County, where the population was 81% black, but not a single black person
had been registered to vote. James Karales
29. Hostile Territory
Though no violence broke out along the way, the marchers were greeted at many points by jeering whites waving Confederate flags.
In one town, above, local law enforcement officers blocked off an intersecting road. Flip Schulke / Corbis
30. Star Power
As the marchers neared Montgomery, their numbers began to swell and attention to their cause began to increase. When they
reached the capital, they would be entertained by some of the top celebrities of the day, like Peter, Paul and Mary, Sammy Davis,
Jr., Leonard Bernstein and Harry Belafonte, above, photographed here with Dr. King and his wife, Coretta.Maurice Sorrell / Ebony
Collection / Ap
31. The State Capitol
On March 25, Martin Luther King, Jr. delivered the petition calling for better treatment and voting rights for Selma's blacks to the
statehouse. Governor George Wallace refused to accept it. Addressing the crowd of 25,000 that had gathered that day, King said,
"Let us march on ballot boxes until race baiters disappear from the political arena...How long will it take? How Long? Not Long.
Because the arm of the moral universe is long but it bends toward justice."AP
32. Selma Today
The impact of the march was long and profound. Within days of Bloody Sunday, president Johnson would present a bill to Congress
that would gain passage later that year as the Voting Rights Act. Among those attending the signing was Amelia Boynton, the
woman who had been so severely wounded during the March 7 attacks. Shortly after the passage of the bill, 7,000 blacks were
added to the voting rolls. And in the coming decades, registration of black voters statewide would increase more than tenfold.
Owaki / Kulla / Corbis
80. cast The Long Road from Selma to Montgomery
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