Freedom Summer Research Paper

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The freedom summer, also known as the Mississippi Summer project, was the nonviolent attempt for a voter registration drive organized by a series of civil rights organizations, those including Congress on Racial Equality (CORE), the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). This historical event took place in Mississippi in the summer of 1964. The main focus of this project was, as mention earlier, the voter registration drive, which intended to gather as many colored Mississippians to join the electoral register. But as suspected, may of this registration were denied by the officials, which was a callous act of injustice. As a result, the organizers formed …show more content…

But as many movements have, there were some crucial people that left a mark in this historical event, they will be mentioned next in the paragraph. To start off, one of the main roles was played by Robert Moses who was the one who suggested the idea of the Freedom Summer. Dave Dennis who the leader of CORE’s (Congress on Racial Equality) actions in Mississippi and Louisiana. Fannie Lou Hamer, together with Annie Devine and Victoria Gray, were essential leaders of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party and were the ones who took the risk to challenge the official segregationist Democratic Party delegation at the Democratic National Committee (DNC), and they also ran for Congress in the Freedom Election. These people were only a part of the many people who participated, supported and helped keep on feet this historical event. Now you may be thinking, was this an important civil rights movement? And the answer to that question is beyond a doubt ‘yes’. The Freedom Summer marked a critical point of the civil rights movement, so it indeed was of great importance for the civil rights of colored people. This act made millions of people realize what was really going on with African-Americans, the condition that they were living on, the need of a change. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 passed Congress partly because of the actions of the Freedom