title:
[Video, Uncaptioned] James Farmer's Reflections #10
creator:
WNVT-TV
creator:
University of Mary Washington
date:
1987
format:
MP4
format:
28 min. 42 sec.
type:
Moving Image
description:
In this lecture, James Farmer discusses the Freedom Summer of 1964, in particular, the disappearance and death of three CORE staff in Neshoba County, Mississippi. He talks about how CORE sent volunteers to see if the local black community knew what had happened to the three men. He describes the deaths of James Chaney, Michael Schwerner, and Andrew Goodman at the hands of a mob that included the sheriff’s deputy and a Baptist preacher. Farmer ends, though, with the fact that Freedom Summer was still successful in registering black voters.
publisher:
University of Mary Washington
subject:
Farmer, James, 1920-1999
subject:
Civil rights movements -- United States -- History -- 20th century
subject:
Mississippi Freedom Project.
subject:
Schwerner, Michael Henry, 1939-1964
subject:
Chaney, James Earl, 1943-1964
subject:
Goodman, Andrew, 1943-1964
relation:
[Transcript] James Farmer's Reflections #10
language:
English
identifier:
reflections_010_uncaptioned
rights:
This item is in copyright. It is available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Items may not be reproduced or used for any commercial purposes without prior written consent from the University of Mary Washington.