Albany Movement

The Albany Movement was a civil rights movement in the city of Albany, Georgia, from 1961 to 1962. It was organized by a coalition of African-American and white activists who sought to end segregation and racial discrimination in the city. Led by Martin Luther King Jr., Charles Sherrod, and others, the group staged sit-ins at segregated lunch counters and boycotts against local businesses that discriminated against black customers. The movement also fought for voting rights for African Americans in the area through protests, marches, voter registration drives, legal challenges, and direct action campaigns such as Freedom Rides. In addition to its efforts within the city limits of Albany itself, it served as an inspiration for other civil rights movements throughout America’s Deep South during this period.


Although ultimately unsuccessful in achieving its goals due to violent police repression led by Police Chief Laurie Pritchett (who believed nonviolent tactics would be more effective than using force), many consider the campaign successful because it laid the groundwork for future Civil Rights victories across america-especially with regards to desegregating public facilities like schools or buses—while also strengthening ties between black activists groups both locally and nationally. After their initial failure in 1962—which resulted largely from Pritchett’s refusal to meet any demands—members of SNCC continued working on other causes, including voter education programs until 1965 when Congress passed legislation outlawing most forms of Jim Crow laws nationwide; thus making much of what they had been fighting for already illegal under federal law.