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Michigan

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demmiblue

(37,872 posts)
Sun Mar 26, 2023, 07:45 AM Mar 2023

On today's date - March 25, 1965, Viola Liuzzo, a housewife from Detroit, drove alone to Alabama... [View all]

On today's date - March 25, 1965, Viola Liuzzo, a housewife from Detroit, drove alone to Alabama after seeing the televised attack at the Edmund Pettus Bridge. She was driving marchers back to Selma from Montgomery when she was killed by KKK. #Fresh #WomensHistoryMonth







Liuzzo, Viola

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 Liuzzo’s, 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 Liuzzo’s civil rights by a federal grand jury and sentenced to ten years in prison.

Liuzzo’s 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 FBI’s culpability of informant Gary Rowe in the murder. Liuzzo’s 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
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It feels a bit like 'back to the future' out there, doesn't it? Joinfortmill Mar 2023 #1
So sad. There could be a movie made from her story. Ferrets are Cool Mar 2023 #2
Absolutely. paleotn Mar 2023 #9
+ 2. n/t iluvtennis Mar 2023 #18
+++ KPN Mar 2023 #25
Acquitted in the Alabama courts. What has really changed in NoMoreRepugs Mar 2023 #3
Apparently nothing. evolves Mar 2023 #5
untill we live up to our creeds , pledges and other feel good stuff. it aint mount AllaN01Bear Mar 2023 #17
Other than now making exceptions for college football and basketball players paleotn Mar 2023 #11
Not a hell of a lot outside the cities Warpy Mar 2023 #14
The date. 2naSalit Mar 2023 #24
Thank you for this history lesson. panader0 Mar 2023 #4
Thank you for posting this piece of HISTORY. Duppers Mar 2023 #6
Will schools in FL be allowed to mention this story? TheRickles Mar 2023 #7
When I was 8 years old, my mother wanted to do the same thing Farmer-Rick Mar 2023 #8
Thanks for posting. K&R. NNadir Mar 2023 #10
Never, ever forget. paleotn Mar 2023 #12
Thank you for bringing this historic woman to my attention. Fla Dem Mar 2023 #13
No, it was very big news in the North. marybourg Mar 2023 #21
You're probably right. As I was in HS at the time, (in a Boston suburb) I probably wasn't Fla Dem Mar 2023 #26
thank you for the history. its amaiZing on what u learn on du. AllaN01Bear Mar 2023 #15
Thank you for posting this! WestMichRad Mar 2023 #16
+ 1. n/t iluvtennis Mar 2023 #19
George Wallace threatened to charge the FBI informant Frances Mar 2023 #20
I don't think she has gotten the recognition she deserves. Her murder was a big event to many LoisB Mar 2023 #22
I still remember her name. Thanks for putting her in front of us. NBachers Mar 2023 #23
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