VIOLA GREGG LIUZZO
- Civil Rights Activist -
G'day folks,
Once again, I present a woman of great courage. Viola Fauver Gregg Liuzzo was a Unitarian Universalist civil rights activist from Michigan. She was also the mother of five kids, and was murdered by members of the Ku Klux Klan for her efforts.
“[We're] going to change the world. One day they'll
write about us. You'll see.”
—Viola Gregg Liuzzo
Synopsis
Viola
Gregg Liuzzo traveled to Alabama in March 1965 to help the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference—led by Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.—with its efforts to
register African-American voters in Selma. Not long after her arrival, Liuzzo
was murdered by members of the Ku Klux Klan while driving a black man from
Montgomery to Selma. She was the only known white female killed during the
Civil Rights Movement.
Civil Rights Activist
Civil
rights worker Viola Gregg Liuzzo was born Viola Gregg on April 11, 1925, in
California, Pennsylvania, part of Washington County. Viola Gregg Liuzzo
traveled to Alabama in March 1965 to help the Southern Christian Leadership
Conference—led by Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.—with its efforts to register
African-American voters in Selma. Not long after her arrival, she was murdered
by members of the Ku Klux Klan.
Before
heading to Selma, Liuzzo had lived in Detroit with her second husband, an
official with the Teamsters union, and her five children (two from a previous
marriage). Her decision to go to Alabama was driven in part by the events of
March 7, 1965, in Selma—also known as “Bloody Sunday.” On that day,
approximately 600 civil rights supporters attempted to march from Selma to
Montgomery along Highway 80. The group barely got started when they were
attacked by state and local police officers on the Edmund Pettus Bridge using
clubs and tear gas. Liuzzo had watched the brutal assault on the protesters in
a news broadcast, and felt compelled to find a way to join the fight for civil
rights.
Selma March
Politically
and socially active, Liuzzo was a member of the Detroit chapter of the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People. She knew firsthand about the
racial injustices that African Americans often suffered in the South, having
spent some of her youth in Tennessee and Georgia, among other places. Liuzzo
may have been aware of the some of the dangers associated with social activism.
On March
9, 1965, Martin Luther King Jr. had again attempted to march to Montgomery from
Selma with more than 1,500 other civil rights advocates. King decided to return
Selma, however, after encountering the state police along the way. That night
in Selma, a white minister named James Reeb was beaten to death by a group of
segregationists.
On March 21, 1965, more than 3,000 marchers led by Martin Luther
King Jr. began their trek from Selma to Montgomery to campaign for voting
rights for African Americans in the South. Unlike previous attempts, activists
on this march were protected from outside interference by U.S. Army and
National Guard troops. The group reached Montgomery on March 25, 1965, and King
gave a speech on the steps of the state capitol building to a crowd of
approximately 25,000 people. During the march, Liuzzo drove supporters between
Selma and Montgomery.
Murder
That
night, Liuzzo was driving another civil rights worker with the SCLC--an
African-American teenager named Leroy Moton--back to Selma on Highway 80, when
another car pulled alongside her vehicle. One of the passengers in the
neighboring car shot at Liuzzo, striking her in the face and killing her. The
car ended up in a ditch, and Moton survived the attack by pretending to be
dead.
The following
day, President Lyndon B. Johnson appeared on television to announce that
Liuzzo's killers had been caught. The police arrested four members of the Ku
Klux Klan for the killing: Eugene Thomas, Collie Leroy Wilkins Jr., William O.
Eaton and Gary Thomas Rowe (who was later revealed to be an F.B.I. informant).
Michigan
Governor George Romney visited with Liuzzo's family after the murder, and
stated that Liuzzo "gave her life for what she believed in, and what she
believed in is the cause of humanity everywhere," according to an article
in The New York Times.
On March
30, 1965, roughly 350 people attended Liuzzo's funeral in Detroit, including
Martin Luther King Jr., United Automobile Workers Union President Walter P.
Reuther, Jimmy Hoffa of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, and United
States Attorney Lawrence Gubow.
Not long
after her death, however, came a campaign to tarnish her reputation, driven by
J. Edgar Hoover, director of the FBI. Assorted false stories were leaked that
she was involved with Moton, and that she was a bad wife and mother.
Eugene
Thomas, Collie Leroy Wilkins Jr. and William O. Eaton were first represented by
Matt H. Murphy, a lawyer for the Ku Klux Klan. After he died in a car accident,
former Birmingham mayor Art Hanes took over the case. They were acquitted by an
all-white jury on state charges related to the crime, but they later convicted
on federal charges.
Thomas
and Wilkins were sentenced to 10 years in prison; Eaton died before his
sentencing. Rowe had immunity from prosecution and went into the witness
protection program. (Thomas and Wilkins later named Rowe as the shooter and he
was indicted on murder charges, but they were dismissed because of his immunity
deal.)
Despite
the efforts to discredit Liuzzo, her murder led President Lyndon B. Johnson to
order an investigation into the Ku Klux Klan. It is also believed that her
death helped encourage legislators to pass the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
Liuzzo's story has been the subject of several books, including Mary Stanton’s From
Selma to Sorrow: The Life and Death of Viola Liuzzo (1998).
In 2004,
Paola di Florio showed her documentary on Liuzzo, Home of the Brave, at
the Sundance Film Festival. The critically acclaimed film explored Liuzzo’s
story as well as the impact of her murder on her children. The children had
sued the federal government over her murder, but their case was eventually
dismissed.
Years
after her vicious murder, Liuzzo received some recognition for her personal
sacrifice. She is among the 40 civil rights martyrs honored on the Civil Rights
Memorial in Montgomery, which was created in 1989. Two years later, the Women
of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference placed a marker where she was
killed on Highway 80. Liuzzo was also inducted into the Michigan Hall of Fame
in 2006.
Clancy's comment: Wow. You have to admire people who stand up against extraordinary odds. I sure do. As I always say, if you want something changed, do something to bring it about.
I'm ...
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