title:
[Transcript] James Farmer's Reflections #13
creator:
Donahue, Laura
creator:
Martz, Michelle
creator:
Matthews, Kelsey
creator:
Murphy, Caitlin
creator:
HIST 421: Adventures in Digital History
date:
2012
format:
PDF
format:
9 pgs
type:
Text
description:
In this lecture, James Farmer discusses what he considered to be a major step forward in the Civil Rights Movement. He created a proposal for Federal funding towards education reform, which would decrease illiteracy across the country. It was created by the collaborative effort of the major Civil Rights leaders under the Center for Community Action Education. Once the Office of Economic Opportunity accepted the proposal, he resigned as national director of CORE and headed the Center for Community Action Education to pursue the illiteracy proposal. However, the media interfered and after internal drama, Farmer states that the education reform eventually “went down the drain, politically.”
publisher:
University of Mary Washington
subject:
Farmer, James, 1920-1999
subject:
Civil rights movements -- United States -- History -- 20th century
subject:
Educational change
subject:
Shriver, Sargent, 1915-2011
subject:
United States. Office of Economic Opportunity
subject:
Powell, Adam Clayton, Jr., 1908-1972
relation:
[Video] James Farmer's Reflections #13
language:
English
identifier:
reflections_013_transcript
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.