Ella Baker [11] (1903-1986) organized northern support for the Montgomery bus boycott, and in 1957 became acting director of Southern Christian Leadership Conference.
Ruby Hurley [11] (1909-1980) aided in all of the major school desegregation cases of the 1950's and 1960's. She also took part in the investigation of the murder of Emmett Till.
J.R. Clifford [11] (1848-1933), Union Army veteran and West Virginia’s first African American attorney, was a founding member of the Niagara movement, a forerunner to the NAACP.
Joel Spingarn [11] (1875-1939), a literary critic and Columbia University professor, was among the leading figures in the NAACP during its first three decades.
Medgar Evers [11] (1925-1963), a World War II veteran turned civil rights leader who returned home from Normandy with a determination to secure his rights as a citizen.
Fannie Lou Hamer [11] (1917 –1977) had been jailed and beaten by the police for her civil rights activities. She offered a dramatic account of the methods used to deny blacks the ballot that was televised across the nation.
Mary Church Terrell [11] (1863-1954) was a writer and lecturer, who became a leading voice for racial justice and women’s rights in the United States and abroad.
Mary White Ovington [11] (1865-1951) was a founder of the NAACP and a leading figure in the association for nearly four decades. Ovington was responsible for enlisting W.E.B Du Bois in the venture of the NAACP.
Charles Hamilton Houston [11] (1895-1950) is often referred to as the architect of the civil rights movement. As dean of Howard Law School, he transformed the school into a laboratory for civil rights law.
Walter White [11] (1893-1955) could easily pass for white, and used this to his advantage in his daring undercover investigations and exposes of lynchings.
Oswald Garrison Villard [11] drafted “The Call” that led to the founding meeting of the NAACP. Villard provided financial support essential to launching the NAACP as a permanent organization.
Daisy Bates [11] (1914-1999) won national attention for her leading role in the 1957 desegregation of Little Rock’s Central High School, one of the pivotal moments in the modern Civil Rights Movement.
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