Mrs. Frankie Muse Freeman is the most inspiring person of 1964, because she changed the world when people were racially discriminating and when it was not common for women to be in positions of power; this was at a time that it was acceptable. Mrs. Freeman worked really hard in life to be a good person and do what’s right to fix these problems. According to operationalizebeauty.com, Freeman said that, “Beauty comes from within, it’s in your attitude and it’s how you treat people.”She made the community better a lot like her parents did, working many jobs, including co-counseling in the NAACP. In addition, President Johnson asked her to be on the new U.S. civil rights commission in 1964. Even as she got older she still never quit helping others. …show more content…
According to VisionaryProject.org, “When Freeman went to law school her son was born, and after that she opened her own private law practice and also co-counseled on a successful NAACP case which ended legal public racial discrimination in housing within the city.” So, Freeman and her family really did work toward earning colored people’s rights because during that time colored people barely had any rights compared to white people. For example, black people couldn’t vote or share water fountains, they also could not work in certain jobs they had to work as teachers and they also had to live in different housing developments. “Frankie muse Freeman won the supreme court appeal the same year her mother passed away. Freeman also traveled to many nations in Africa to serve as a representative of the United States at the United Nations Housing Conference. Freeman then worked as an attorney for the St. Louis Land Clearance and Housing Authorities and was a court judge in the early 70’s.” ontheblacklist.net said. Freeman was very busy yet she still traveled to places to help homeless people in Africa get …show more content…
Johnson chose her to be part of the new U.S. Civil Rights Commission, she was then reappointed by Presidents Richard Nixon, and Gerald Ford. Jimmy Carter also reappointed her. She worked for the U.S. commission from 1964-1979. “Not only was she the first women to be on the U.S. commission on civil rights, but she was also one of the first African American female attorneys to practice law in the state of Missouri said mobar.org.” Freeman had to be very brave to be the first women on the U.S. commission and to be one of the first to practice law. “After freeman stopped working for the U.S. commission she was inducted into the National Bar of Association’s Hall of Fame in 1990.” Is what thehistorymakers.org said. She got in the Hall of Fame because she was an African American lawyer who helped on the NAACP case that eventually ended racial discrimination within the