Flonzie B. Goodloe speaking at an evening gathering in Canton, Mississippi, during the "March Against Fear" begun by James Meredith.

She is standing on a ladder, Floyd McKissick is standing in the background. Several people are holding up microphones to record Goodloe speak. (In 1968, after winning the campaign for election commissioner in Madison County, she became the first African American woman elected to public office in Mi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Peppler, Jim
Format: Electronic
Published: Alabama Department of Archives and History
Subjects:
Online Access:http://cdm17217.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/peppler/id/9049
Description
Summary:She is standing on a ladder, Floyd McKissick is standing in the background. Several people are holding up microphones to record Goodloe speak. (In 1968, after winning the campaign for election commissioner in Madison County, she became the first African American woman elected to public office in Mississippi.) The march began on June 5 in Memphis, Tennessee, and ended on June 26 in Jackson, Mississippi. Meredith was injured by gunshots shortly after setting out, and he was not able to rejoin the march until June 25. The event was covered in the issues of The Southern Courier for June 11-12, June 18-19, June 25-26, and July 2-3, 1966, which are available online (not on the ADAH website): http://www.southerncourier.org/low-res/Vol2_No24_1966_06_11.pdf and http://www.southerncourier.org/low-res/Vol2_No25_1966_06_18.pdf and http://www.southerncourier.org/low-res/Vol2_No26_1966_06_25.pdf and http://www.southerncourier.org/low-res/Vol2_No27_1966_07_02.pdf