Photo by: Babble
Fannie Lou Hamer
In 1962, Hamer heard a sermon by an organizer of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee that called for black Americans to register to vote. She was the first to volunteer. Hamer became one of the country's most prominent voting registration activists, helping to organize the "Freedom Summer" initiative and other registration drives. She was beaten severely but kept on, singing hymns as she worked. "I am ...
more Photo by: Babble
Fannie Lou Hamer
In 1962, Hamer heard a sermon by an organizer of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee that called for black Americans to register to vote. She was the first to volunteer. Hamer became one of the country's most prominent voting registration activists, helping to organize the "Freedom Summer" initiative and other registration drives. She was beaten severely but kept on, singing hymns as she worked. "I am sick and tired of being sick and tired," Hamer famously said, words engraved on her headstone at her gravesite in Mississippi.
less