Michigan
Related: About this forumOn today's date - March 25, 1965, Viola Liuzzo, a housewife from Detroit, drove alone to Alabama...
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Viola Liuzzo was a civil rights activist who was murdered by the Ku Klux Klan as she drove another activist from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama, during the Selma Voting Rights March.
Born Viola Gregg in Pennsylvania on April 11, 1925, she was raised in poverty in Georgia and Tennessee during the Great Depression, where she witnessed segregation first-hand. She later moved to Michigan, married Teamster Anthony Liuzzo in 1950, and attended Wayne State University. She became active in the Detroit chapter of the NAACP.
A middle-class, white mother of five children, Liuzzo was spurred to join the efforts of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and the marchers after seeing televised footage of hundreds of peaceful protestors being clubbed and tear-gassed by police on the Edmund Pettus Bridge on March 7, 1965. Soon afterward, she drove her Oldsmobile 800 miles to Selma. On March 25, she was driving 19-year-old Leroy Moton, an African American, to Montgomery, when a car carrying four KKK members began chasing them. The KKK members car pulled alongside Liuzzos, and they shot her in the head, killing her instantly. Moton was not hit and survived by playing dead.
Within 24 hours of the murder, President Lyndon Johnson went on television to announce the arrests of the KKK members Eugene Thomas, Collie Leroy Wilkins, Jr., William Orville Eaton, and Gary Thomas Rowe and demanded an immediate Congressional investigation of the KKK. Rowe was protected by the Federal Bureau of Investigation as one of its paid informants and testified against the other men. The KKK members were all acquitted in the Alabama courts, despite eyewitness testimony and ballistics evidence, but found guilty of violating Viola Liuzzos civil rights by a federal grand jury and sentenced to ten years in prison.
Liuzzos funeral in Detroit was attended by many dignitaries, including Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Walter Reuther. Yet after her death her reputation was slandered, as false accusations were made about her morality, dedication to her family, and drug use. In 1978, documents released through the Freedom of Information Act revealed that FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover masterminded the smear campaign, fearful of the FBIs culpability of informant Gary Rowe in the murder. Liuzzos children were threatened and taunted, and a cross was burned on their lawn, prompting the need for round-the-clock guard for the next two years.
https://detroithistorical.org/learn/encyclopedia-of-detroit/liuzzo-viola-0
Joinfortmill
(16,635 posts)Ferrets are Cool
(21,997 posts)paleotn
(19,532 posts)iluvtennis
(20,948 posts)There should be! Imagine DeSantis' and all the other MAGAts' heads exploding if that movie actually was made and released! Disney seems like an appropriate executive producer.
NoMoreRepugs
(10,649 posts)the last 60 years?
evolves
(5,597 posts)America's refusal to deal with racism and white supremacy is the cancer that is and has been destroying us for more than 250 years. Until we address this on a large scale, nothing will change. I doubt it will ever happen, unfortunately.
AllaN01Bear
(23,340 posts)to a hill of beans.
paleotn
(19,532 posts)in order to remain competitive? Not one damn thing.
Warpy
(113,131 posts)They've progressed to the 1920s, driving cars instead of horse drawn buggies and wagons. Alabama had the most toxic radio I've ever heard but they were still better than Mississippi. They had better roads anyway.
As much as I love the mountains down south, you couldn't pay me to live there again.
2naSalit
(93,505 posts)panader0
(25,816 posts)Duppers
(28,260 posts)NT
TheRickles
(2,473 posts)Where will the line be drawn in deciding what constitutes "CRT"? After hearing how the Rosa Parks story recently got whitewashed (literally), I can imagine Viola Liuzzo's murder being described as an "out-of-state tourist dies in unfortunate auto accident". Ugh.
Farmer-Rick
(11,538 posts)She was a mother of 4 back then. She was head of our local chapter of a civil rights group in MD. She had a huge fight with my Dad over it. She ended up not going because my Dad feared for her life.
We really had no idea that the FBI were the cause, support, and agitators of so much of the assassination, deaths and turmoil back then.
NNadir
(34,842 posts)paleotn
(19,532 posts)Fla Dem
(25,870 posts)Yesterday was the 58th anniversary of her death.
I probably knew about the killing as I'm sure it was in the news. But without the 24 hour news coverage like we have today, (for good or bad) it was probably a once and done news report on the evening news.
Glad she's gotten the recognition she deserves and FU to those who have tried to sully her reputation over the years.
marybourg
(13,214 posts)Through many, many news cycles.
Fla Dem
(25,870 posts)as aware as I should have been. As I grew older and worked in Boston, the racial and discrimination issues became much more dominant in my world view.
AllaN01Bear
(23,340 posts)WestMichRad
(1,889 posts)An important piece of Michigan history of which I knew nothing.
iluvtennis
(20,948 posts)Frances
(8,579 posts)as I recall.(I was living in Alabama at that time)
Later I met someone who said Robert Kennedy called her father in law who practiced law in Alabama. Kennedy said they needed a local lawyer to defend the informant. Her father-in-law agreed to defend the informant. His law firm kicked him out of his firm for getting involved in the case. And then Wallace backed down and did not press a case against the informant:
Do any of you know where I could read about this part of the story?
I havent been able to find it when I google it.
LoisB
(9,025 posts)of us at the time.