Photo by: Babble
Marie Foster
The number eight was significant for this Civil Rights activist. It was the number of times she tried to register to vote before succeeding. She was also a founding member of the Dallas County Voters League, dubbed the Courageous Eight, and worked with Martin Luther King, Jr. to spotlight Selma, Alabama in the voting rights movement. Although she was beaten by police in Selma in 1965, Foster walked on in protests with...
more Photo by: Babble
Marie Foster
The number eight was significant for this Civil Rights activist. It was the number of times she tried to register to vote before succeeding. She was also a founding member of the Dallas County Voters League, dubbed the Courageous Eight, and worked with Martin Luther King, Jr. to spotlight Selma, Alabama in the voting rights movement. Although she was beaten by police in Selma in 1965, Foster walked on in protests with injured feet and knees. Marie Foster, called the "mother of the voting rights movement" by local organizers, died at age 85.
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