Headline Hook
The march that began with fear ended by changing the language of freedom.
Main Description
In June 1966, James Meredith set out to walk alone from Memphis to Jackson, Mississippi.
He called it a March Against Fear.
He believed that if one Black man could walk freely through Mississippi, others would find the courage to claim their right to vote.
On the second day, he was shot.
What followed changed American history.
Civil rights leaders and ordinary citizens continued the march in his place.
Thousands joined along the way.
And on a summer night in Greenwood, Mississippi, a new phrase exploded into the national vocabulary:
Black Power.
This book tells the dramatic story of the 220-mile march that transformed the Civil Rights Movement and launched a new era of political and cultural change in America.
Through vivid narrative and historical research, readers witness:
- The shooting that shocked the nation
- The march that united civil rights leaders
- The moment the movement began to change
- The debate that reshaped American politics
- The lasting legacy that continues today
More than a history of a march, this is the story of a turning point-when the struggle for rights began to become a struggle for power.
Closing Hook
The road from Memphis to Jackson did not end in 1966.
Its legacy still shapes the nation today.