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Michael Schewerner Vs Andrew Goodman

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Andrew Goodman, an American activist and social worker, once said, “The road to freedom must be uphill even if it is arduous and frustrating.” During the 1900s, there was a war in America. It was not a war for power or territory; it was a war for equal rights, and Andrew Goodman, Michael Schwerner, and James Chaney paid for this war with their lives. Michael Schwerner and Andrew Goodman were both Jewish men who wanted to prevent another Holocaust from happening. They had already lost their family during World War II; they could not stand the thought of losing more people to pointless violence. James Chaney was from Meridian, Mississippi, so he had to experience the cruelty first hand. Although these three men are from different parts of the …show more content…

On there way back, in Neshoba County, Neshoba County’s Deputy Cecil Price pulled the three reformers over for speeding. Since Chaney was driving, he was charged with speeding; Schwerner and Goodman were charged with being suspects in the Mount Zion Methodist Church burning. He arrested all three of them and held them in jail for six hours; he did not even give them a phone call. After Deputy Price finally released them at 10:30 p.m., Schwerner, Chaney, and Goodman were on there way back to Meridian, but they got pulled over again, but this time the entire Ku Klux Klan accompanied the Deputy Sheriff. Schwerner and Goodman were shot in the head, but James Chaney was tortured by the Ku Klux Klan members before they shot him. They news of this disappearance reached the White House the next day, so the Federal Bureau of Investigation opened an investigation into the disappearance of Michael Schwerner, James Chaney, and Andrew Goodman. The government agents found the station wagon that the three men were driving, however, they could not find the bodies. The bodies of these men was finally discovered on August 4, 1964. Although the murders were not convicted immediately, they were eventually murdered with the help of people such as Jerry Mitchell, a Clarion Ledger

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