HISTORY ON FANNIE LOU HAMER
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"Nobody is free until everybody is free"
When young civil rights workers arrived in Ruleville in the Mississippi Delta in 1962, they were looking for local black people
who could help convince their neighbors to register to vote. They found forty-four-year-old Fannie Lou Hamer. Hamer was attracted to the young people, especially thos
e in the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). “They treated us like we were special and we loved ‘em,” she said. “We trusted ‘em.” For the rest of her life, Hamer would work in the Civil Rights Movement on both the state and national stage. She felt that civil rights was her calling, her mission. After the meeting at Williams Chapel Church in Ruleville, seventeen people went with Hamer to the Sunflower County seat of Indianola to try to register on August 31, 1962. The prospective voters felt threatened by men with rifles in the back of their pickup trucks who circled the courthouse ominously. At that time, Mississippi required people registering to vote to interpret a randomly selected section of the state constitution, a complicated document. Prospective black voters inevitably failed
the test, whether they were well-educated or not. Even after several years of effort in Sunflower County, by the spring of 1965 only 155 black people — 1.1 percent of those eligible to vote — were registered, while more than 7,000 whites were registered,
or 80 percent of those eligible to vote. No one was registered that August day. Hamer, who had a booming voice, sang to try to calm people’s fears on the bus taking them home. Years later, Harry Belafonte, who often appeared with Hamer at movement events, said her songs “from the heart would bring another dimension” to the action when people got down to whatever business was at hand. Before or after her speeches, Hamer would inspire her listeners by singing a song that soon became associated with her, “This Little Light of Mine.”
The day of the registration attempt in Indianola, Hamer lost her job on the W. Marlow plantation where she had worked as a timekeeper for eighteen years, and where her husband, Perry Hamer, worked as a tractor driver. The owner objected to her attempt to register to vote. Later that fall Hamer attended a SNCC leadership training conference at Fisk University. She then returned to the Indianola courthouse until officials finally allowed her to register to vote that December. Hamer, born Fannie Lou Townsend on October 6, 1917, in Montgomery County, Mississippi, was the youngest of twenty children. Her parents, Ella and James Lee Townsend, were sharecroppers, which meant that at harvest time, they turned their crops over to the landowner and were paid a small amount for their share. They moved to Sunflower County to work on the E. Brandon plantation when Hamer was two years old. By age six, she was weeding the cotton field, then helping to pick the cotton. Hamer went to school through the eighth grade, which was more schooling than many black children had at the time. In 1944, Fannie Lou Townsend married Perry Hamer, whom everyone called “Pap,” and they lived on the Marlow plantation outside Ruleville. When Marlow learned that Mrs. Hamer could read and write, he made her the record keeper for the plantation. The Hamers had no children of their own, but they raised two girls from impoverished homes, and later adopted the two daughters of one of them who died. Hamer was respected in both the white and black communities as someone who could help settle disputes and always had a moment to hear a neighbor’s problem. She had deep religious beliefs; she had been brought up in the church and relied on its strength. In the fall of 1962, Robert Moses of SNCC invited Hamer to a convention at Fisk University, thus launching her career as a leader of the civil rights movement. In 1963, she again tried to register to vote, this time succeeding. In June of the same year, Hamer and several other black women were arrested for sitting in a “whites-only” bus station restaurant in Charleston, South Carolina. That night, the group was brutally beaten at the jailhouse. Hamer suffered a blood clot in her eye, kidney damage, and permanent injury to her leg. After three days in jail she was released, immediately resuming her work as an activist with renewed commitment to the movement. For the next several years, Fannie Lou Hamer worked to secure the social, economic, and political rights of the African-American community. Hamer became a SNCC field secretary in early 1963. A few months later, she attended a citizenship training school sponsored by the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) in Charleston, South Carolina, to learn how to teach her neighbors about the benefits of citizenship. On the bus trip home in June, the bus made a rest stop in Winona, Mississippi. Annelle Ponder of SCLC, who was traveling with the group, said that three or four of the people went in to the café to be served. They sat at the counter but the waitress refused to serve them. A highway patrolman came from the rear of the café and tapped some of the group on the shoulder with his billy club, saying, “Y’all get out — get out.” Ponder reminded him it was against the law to refuse them service but he said, “Ain’t no damn law, you just get out of here!”
On the way back to the bus, Ponder wrote down the license number of the patrol car and at that, the patrolman and police chief came out of the restaurant and put the cafe group under arrest. As that was occurring, Hamer got off the bus to see whether the rest of the group should go on to Greenwood. The police chief arrested her
as well. Later the police had two other black prisoners beat Hamer and 15-year-old June Johnson, who would not say “sir” to the men. In a trial later that year, an all-white jury acquitted the law officers. Hamer recalled, “After I got out of jail, half dead, I found that Medgar Evers had been shot down in his own yard.”
In Freedom Summer 1964, more young people, white and black, came to Mississippi to join the voting rights effort. Civil rights workers decided to dramatize the discrimination blacks faced in Mississippi
by challenging the all-white delegation that would be selected to represent the state at the 1964 Democratic National Convention in Atlantic City, New Jersey. Black people from around the state tried to participate in selecting delegates who would nominate the party’s presidential candidate, but were turned away. In 1964, she co-founded the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party (MFDP) and spoke at the Democratic National Convention at which she called for mandatory integrated state delegations. They held their own meetings and selected sixty-eight people to represent them at the convention. Aaron Henry, a druggist from Clarksdale and longtime NAACP activist, headed the delegation, and Hamer was the delegation’s vice chair. At a national convention, the party’s credentials committee considers any challenges and decides who will be seated to vote on the nominees. The MFDP lined up its witnesses, including the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr., the national Civil Rights Movement leader. Hamer gave the most dramatic presentation. Telling about being jailed and beaten, she concluded, “All of this is on account we want to register, to become first-class citizens, and if the Freedom Democratic Party is not seated now, I question America …”
At the zenith of the Civil Rights Movement, Hamer pioneered numerous political and humanitarian efforts. In 1964, she announced her candidacy for the Mississippi House of Representatives but was barred from the ballot. In response, the MFDP introduced Freedom Ballots that included
all candidates, black and white. Though it was unofficial, Hamer won the Freedom Ballot. U.S. Senator Hubert Humphrey, who would become the party’s candidate for vice president, sought a compromise at the request of President Lyndon Johnson that would give the MFDP two seats and the promise of reform for the 1968 convention. That made Hamer angry. “We didn’t come here for no seats ‘cause all of us is tired,” she said. The MFDP delegates rejected the compromise, but the convention delegates did not know that when they voted to accept it, and almost all the white Mississippians walked out. After the fall election, Hamer and two other women, Victoria Gray Adams of Hattiesburg and Annie Devine of Canton, challenged the seating of the five-member Mississippi Congressional delegation, Thomas G. Abernethy, William Colmer, Prentiss Walker, Jamie L. Whitten, and John Bell Williams. They charged that because blacks were kept from registering, the election was unfair. Hundreds of their supporters went to Washington when the Congressional session opened in January 1965, and Hamer, Adams, and Devine were given guest seats in the House chamber that day. Yet later, on September 17, 1965, the House of Representatives rejected their challenge, 228-143. Hamer did not relent in her activities. In 1966, she walked with Dr. King & Andrew Young as they resumed the march against fear that James Meredith had launched across the state. Meredith, who had been the first black student at the University of Mississippi, had to halt his march when he was shot from ambush. Hamer also raised money to support election activities in two Delta towns. She lost a bid to become a board member for the Sunflower County anti-poverty agency in 1967 because she questioned their authority and the true
value of the agency’s programs to poor people. Local whites had united behind
her opponent, a black man. Today, the movement is fighting CANCER HEALTH DISPARITIES. This movement is a rainbow of many people from all walks of life who are working together to save lives!