Home / Full timeline / Martin Luther King, Jr. is attacked as he registers to vote at a formerly all-white hotel as part of a civil rights voter registration drive. It begins a string of violence against Black voter hopefuls.
Martin Luther King, Jr. is attacked as he registers to vote at a formerly all-white hotel as part of a civil rights voter registration drive. It begins a string of violence against Black voter hopefuls.
1965 (Jan 2 - Mar 25)
Civil rights forces led by Martin Luther King, Jr., opened a voter registration drive in Selma, Alabama. King was attacked as he registered at a formerly all-white hotel, but he was not seriously injured. After two weeks, on January 19, Dallas County law enforcement officers began arresting would-be Black voters and their supporters. A federal district court countered by issuing an order, on January 23, that prohibited interference with those seeking the right to vote. The drive to register Black voters in Alabama developed into a nationwide protest movement as local whites in Dallas County stiffened their resistance, and civil rights leaders intensified their efforts. More than seven hundred Blacks, including Martin Luther King, Jr., were arrested on February 1. On February 26, Black demonstrator Jimmie L. Jackson died from wounds inflicted by state troopers in Marion, Alabama. On March 7, several hundred protestors were routed by billy clubs, tear gas, whips, and cattle prods as they attempted to march across the Edmund Pettus bridge in Selma, Alabama. President Lyndon Johnson, sympathizing with the demonstrators, denounced the incident. Reverend James Reeb, a white minister from Boston who assisted in the voting rights drive, died following an assault by three white men on March 11. On March 17, a federal judge ordered Alabama officials not to interfere with a proposed march from Selma to Montgomery, the state capital. The march was designed to dramatize the denial of voting rights and drum up national support. The fifty-mile march, occurring between March 21-25, was protected by federal troops, and about fifty thousand people appeared before the Alabama state capitol to hear Martin Luther King, Jr., and others denounced Alabama leaders for interfering with voting rights. Alabama governor George C. Wallace received a petition from the crowd. White civil rights supporter from Michigan, Viola Gregg Liuzzo, was murdered that night. Three Ku Klux Klansmen were later convicted of conspiracy to violate civil rights in Liuzzo's death.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.