FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

Friday, October 26, 2012

CONTACT: Barbara Lau, 919/613-6167, ,

WOMEN WALKING TO COMMEMORATE THE FIRST FREEDOM RIDE

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3 FROM DURHAM TO CHAPEL HILL

DURHAM, N.C. –Nine Women’s teams will be walking from the Pauli Murray Historic Marker in Durham to the Journey of Reconciliation Historic Marker in Chapel Hill to commemorate the 65th Anniversary of the 1947 Journey of Reconciliation, the “First Freedom Ride.” The nineteams replicates the number of teams of bus riders who tested the 1946 Irene Morgan v State of Virginia U.S. Supreme Court ruling that desegregated interstate buses. Women are walking because the 1947 riderswere black and white men. Through this walk we will connectwith our history andinspire contemporary activism.

The STILL WALKING FOR JUSTICE Send Off Rally is scheduled for 10 a.m. in the shadow of the Pauli Murray Historic Marker at the corner of W. Chapel Hill and Carroll Streets in Durham. The Welcome Rally will take at place at 3:30 p.m. at the Inter-Faith Council, 100 W. Rosemary at N. Columbia Street directlyacross the street from the Journey of Reconciliation Historic Marker in Chapel Hill.

The Pauli Murray Project recognizes the importance of honoring the women who have risked their safety by protesting for justice,” says director Barbara Lau, “and we want to highlight the courage of our local female activists as well.

Each walker will be wearing a bright yellow t-shirts bearing the name of a female activist such as Pauli Murray, Ella Baker and Juanita Nelson, who helped plan the 1947 action but could not participate or Virginia Williams, Joan P. Preiss, Joyce Ware, Ann Atwater and Doris Lyons, local women activists whose storiesdeserve more attention. Folks attending the send off rally will also be invited to call out the names of women and men who have inspired them to social justice activism.

The 1947 Journey of Reconciliation, known as the First Freedom Ride, used non-violent direct action on buses along routes in the Upper South states of Virginia, North Carolina, Kentucky and Tennessee. Organized by the Fellowship of Reconciliation and the Congress of Racial Equality, the courageous protesters rode in pairs or trios as interstate passengers. To test the law, they sat next to one another in the white section of the bus and waitedfor reactions from the bus driver and other officials.

For the most part the reaction to the freedom rides was also not violent. But in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, a white mob attacked one rider and four others were arrested and sentenced to 30 days on a chain gang, an event now commemorated by a NC state highway historic marker. One of those arrested in Chapel Hill was black gay pacifist Bayard Rustin who went on to coordinate the historic 1963 March on Washington where Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. gave his iconic "I Have a Dream" speech.

"Bayard Rustin and Pauli Murray were civil rights pioneers who knew each other and worked together including the 1947 Journey,” says Mandy Carter coordinator of the Bayard Rustin Centennial Project of the National Black Justice Coalition, "so, we're really excited to be partnering with the Pauli Murray Project." The Journey inspired a younger generation who used this same tactic during the well documented1961 Freedom Rides that transformed the Civil Rights Movement.

Struggles for civil and human rights continue--voting rights, prisoners’ rights, immigrant rights, women’s rights and the rights of lesbian, gay, bi-sexual, transgender and queer people are still on the line and require our vigilance to protect them. In a 1980 interview with Ms. Magazine, Pauli Murray took the long view saying, “I’ve been both a winner and a loser, but after I lose someone else wins, because this is a relay race.”

The November 3 Walk is sponsored by the Pauli Murray Project and the Bayard Rustin Centennial Project of the National Black Justice Coalition with support from the Chapel Hill Friends Meeting, the Southern Oral History Program at UNC-CH, Carolwoods Elders for Peace and the Marion Cheek Jackson Center for Saving and Making History. The is being presented in collaboration with a series of programs focused on Civil Rights in Chapel Hill. For more information about the Chapel Hill events, go to:

Brief Biographies:

Ann Atwater: A single mother, Ann became an activist when she learned how to demand repairs from her landlord before paying back rent. She was recruited by Operation Breakthrough as a community organizer and quickly became a leader of the Housing Committee for United Operations. She gained tremendous expertise about public housing regulations making her an extremely effective advocate for lower income families in Durham. Ann’s transformative relationship with Klu Klux Klan leader C. P. Ellis was chronicled in a film, An Unlikely Friendship, and a book, Best of Enemies. More information

Ella Baker: An activist for more than five decades, Ella Baker is perhaps best known as the “godmother” of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) where she mentored an entire generation of young leaders in the Civil Rights Movement. The way she understood, expressed, and advocated for participatory democracy and grassroots leadership has influenced countless radical and progressive organizations formed after she began organizing in the 1930's.A North Carolina State Highway historic marker was recently dedicated to Ella Baker in Littleton.More information

Doris Lyon: In 1943, 16 year-old Doris Lyon refused to give up her seat to a white patron and move to the back of a Durham City bus. A police detective assaulted her while forcibly removing her from the bus despite her efforts to resist his physical advances. Both black and white community members rallied around her but she was convicted of assault and battery and fined for breaking North Carolina’s segregation laws. More information

Irene Morgan: As a young mother Irene Morgan was arrested for violating segregation laws and resisting arrest when she refused to give up her seat on an interstate Virginia to Maryland bus. The NAACP took her case all the way to the Supreme Court and won a 1946 decision named for Ms. Morgan that made forced segregation of interstate buses illegal. President Bill Clinton awarded Morgan the Presidential Citizens Medal in 2001 to recognize her early victory in the civil rights movement. More information

Juanita Morrow Nelson: Juanita Morrow joined Pauli Murray and other Howard University students when, in 1943, they sat in at a Washington DC cafeteria to protest segregation. As a journalist, she met Wally Nelson, one of the 1947 Freedom riders. They married and workedtogether against war, promoting peace and non-violence. Her book, A Matter of Freedom and Other Writings, was published in 1988. More information

Pauli Murray: Recently named a saint by the Episcopal Church, Pauli Murray spent her life advocating for justice and equality for everyone. She worked as a writer, attorney, feminist, educator, poet and priest to promote an inclusive movement for social change. She was a consummate researcher whose written works in law, history, and memoire demonstrate her political astuteness and vision for an organizing effort linking communities who experience the overlapping oppressions of racism, feminism and homophobia. More information

Joan P. Preiss: A long-time advocate for improving conditions for migrant farm workers, Joan was the heart and soul of the Triangle Friends of the United Farm Workers. She was a fearless protester known for the “pickle tiara” she donned while greeting shoppers during the boycott of Mt. Olive Pickles at local grocery stores. As her activism grew, she became secretary of the North Carolina Pesticide Board and served on the Executive Committee of the National Farm Worker Ministry.More information

Joyce Ware:As the leader of the NAACP student chapter at North Carolina College, Joyce Ware activated young people as soldiers in the Civil Rights Movement in North Carolina. With a list of demands in hand, the students and others threatened 30 days of street actions and mobilized massive demonstrations in 1963 to protest segregated restaurants, stores, motels and theaters and employment discrimination. Joyce Ware and Floyd McKissick Sr. chaired the negotiating committee and they forced Durham Mayor Wense Graberak to work with local businesses to step up the pace of integration. More information

Virginia Williams: In 1957, Virginia Williams and six others staged a sit in at Durham’s Royal Ice Cream Parlor. The Royal Seven, included two other women, Mary Clyburn and Vivian Jones, were arrested for trespassing, convicted the next day and fined $10. Their case was appealed up to the NC Supreme Court, which upheld their convictions. Virginia was inspired by her father’s early involvement in the NAACP in northeastern North Carolina. She participated throughout her life in many other protests including the 1963 March on Washington.More information

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