Alabama's
Ride to Freedom Tour Revisits Historic Sites of the Civil Rights Struggle
by Robert G. Miller
There are many ways to write
history. Professors do it in books and journals.
Parents, teachers and ministers write history in the hearts and minds of the
lives they touch. Carpenters write history in wood and engineers in steel. In
January, I decided to write history through a journal as I experienced it.
Thirty journalists from throughout the nation, including me, went to Alabama for
a few days to learn about the civil rights struggle of the 50s and 60s, and see
just how far we have come. Our bus ride called “Alabama’s Ride to Freedom
Tour,” was sponsored by the Alabama Bureau of Tourism and Travel and Lewis
Communications. The purpose was to raise visibility through the media for
Alabama civil rights sites as tourist destinations. The bus tour took us to
several historic cities. From walking hand in hand over the Edmund Pettus Bridge
to meeting Rosa Parks' attorney, Fred Gray, this journey was simply awesome.
Meeting the civil rights pioneers and experiencing their living history is
something I will never forget. As Americans and especially African Americans,
you will find a renewed appreciation for this saga of history and celebrate the
freedoms we enjoy today.
Journalists’ Notebook
January 13 – Birmingham
A short plane ride from New
Orleans to Birmingham allowed me to
reflect on my upcoming journey and set my frame of mind for the trip. Within
hours, we would walk through the 16th Street Baptist Church and see the
courthouse where Bobby Frank Cherry was tried for murdering four
little girls. Dozens of years of emotion surfaced as I anticipated passing
through Birmingham's Civil Rights District. Once I arrived in Birmingham,
nervousness turned to excitement at the hospitality shown by our hosts of many
ethnicities.
As Richard Arrington, the former mayor of Birmingham wrote, "We hope
we can try to tell our own story. We want to help ourselves and others to
understand what happened here, why it happened, and how we overcame the
violence through nonviolence and changed the nation."
After a
reception at the historic Tutwiler Hotel with local dignitaries, accomplished
jazz
musicians and other inspirational African Americans, we anxiously awaited our
historic ride to freedom through Birmingham, Selma, Montgomery and Tuskegee.
January 14 – Birmingham and Selma
After a country breakfast
filled with soul-stirring gospel music, we headed to the Birmingham Civil Rights
Institute. Richly detailed exhibits in the Institute revealed slices of Black
and white life from the late 1800s to the present. A series of galleries told
the story of daily life for African Americans in Alabama and the nation, and how
it differed dramatically from the lives we enjoy, and often take for granted
today. As collegians, you may be particularly interested in the section devoted
to James Meredith’s 1962 admission to the University of Mississippi.
Next to
the Civil Rights Institute, the 16th Street Baptist Church is one of
the most famous civil rights landmarks. We walked in the exact location where
the four schoolgirls were killed by a bomb in 1963 while changing into their
choir robes. The deaths of Denise McNair, Carole Robertson, Cynthia Wesley and
Addie Mae Collins changed our lives forever.
Selma
showcased one of the basic principles many Americans take for granted, the right
to vote. Selma’s mayor, James Perkins, and Museum Director Joanne Bland
greeted us at the door of the National Voting Rights Museum. In the 1960s,
Perkins family could not vote because of the color of their skin. Now as
Selma’s first African-American mayor, he served as our escort to the historic
St. James Hotel, which overlooks the Edmund Pettus Bridge. Mayor Perkins is one
of the reminders of how far our country has come. The keynote speaker at an
evening banquet at the St. James Hotel was Rev. F.D. Reese, pastor of the
city’s Ebenezer Baptist Church. It was this veteran civil rights leader who
initially invited Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. to come to Selma to lead the
voting rights demonstrations of 1965.
January 15 – Martin Luther King, Jr.’s Birthday –
Selma, Montgomery and Tuskegee
The
sunrise glistened on the Edmund Pettus Bridge, greeting early risers in Selma.
January 15 was after all a special day, Martin Luther King, Jr.’s birthday.
After a birthday breakfast, we were inspired by a choir on the steps of the
Brown Chapel A.M.E. Church in Selma. Founded in 1867, the church served as
headquarters for African Americans and all freedom riders during the Civil
Rights Movement. It was the starting point for the Selma to Montgomery March.
From the church, we followed the path of the march and joined arms crossing the
Edmund Pettus Bridge, the site of Bloody Sunday. Walking with actual civil
rights pioneers, who were beaten and jailed, is a memory I will never forget.
After
boarding the bus to Montgomery, our next stop was one of the most important
locations in African-American history, the corner of Moulton and Montgomery
Streets. It was at this site on December 1, 1955 that Rosa Parks refused to give
up her seat on a Montgomery city bus. Today, this site is the location of the
Rosa Parks Library and Museum on the campus of Troy State University-Montgomery.
Seeing Rosa Parks’ police records with her fingerprints makes the experience
even more real. A bus from the era dramatically tells the story of Rosa Parks
and her struggle. It is fitting that this important site be turned into a museum
and library to inspire students of all ages. Rosa Parks was able to see this
inspirational tribute to her when the museum opened in 2000.
Birthday
cake and a choir greeted the weary travelers at Dexter Avenue King Memorial
Baptist Church. Dr. King began his leadership in the Civil Rights Movement while
serving as minister there. The church is noted as the birthplace of the Movement
and serves as an example of the role African-American churches played in social
reform. Friends of Dr. King welcomed the group and shared insights into his
life. A mural in the church depicts major events in the life of the father of
the Civil Rights Movement.
After
passing the Civil Rights Memorial and the state capitol, our next stop was
Tuskegee University. “Who says Blacks can’t fly,” challenged first lady
Eleanor Roosevelt after taking a ride in Charles Alfred Anderson’s two-seater
years ago. At Moton Field, we learned Anderson was not only a record-setting
aviator, but he was a man with a mission to teach others to fly. In a special
test program at Moton Field, he taught the Tuskegee Airmen who flew in World War
II. Today, you can see an actual-size, working replica of the airplane and learn
more about these African-American heroes.
The
Tuskegee Human and Civil Rights Multicultural Center showcases artifacts from
the civil rights era and the Tuskegee Syphilis Study. Nearby, Booker T.
Washington’s home, The Oaks, has been restored and is operated as a house
museum by the National Park Service. At the end of our tour, we met Fred Gray,
lawyer, author and inspirer. The attorney for Rosa Parks, Gray wrote one of the
best books on civil rights, Bus Ride to Justice.
January 16 – Tour Finale
While
Alabama may always be linked with the national consciousness of civil rights,
the state has come to embrace it and learn from it. The preservation of these
sites, which were so important to the struggle, is testimony to a state and a
nation determined to recognize and celebrate those who have made sacrifices to
give us the freedoms we have today. I challenge you to take this meaningful and
inspiring trip to commemorate those who enabled us to come this far in the
struggle for equality. For more information on civil rights tours, call
1-800-ALABAMA or visit http://www.touralabama.org.
Robert G. Miller is the vice president of iMinorities, Inc., and editor of THE BLACK COLLEGIAN Magazine.
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