MSMo 406 Fannie Lou Hamer Pt. 1 - Registering to Vote - a podcast by USM Center for Oral History

from 2014-07-11T20:26:40

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In 1962, Fannie Lou Hamer was a sharecropper’s wife, living on a plantation in Ruleville, Mississippi. In this episode, she recalls the first time she tried to register to vote.


After leaving Indianola, the bus carrying Hamer’s group was pulled over by state and local law enforcement. She describes how they were forced to return to Indianola to face an assortment of trumped up charges.


Later that same day when Hamer returned home, the owner of the plantation confronted her about attempting to register.  She describes how she was forced to leave her home of 18 years that very night for refusing to withdraw her registration.


The plantation owner's harsh treatment of Hamer led her to become an inspirational figure in the Civil Rights movement.


 

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