Amelia Boynton will be turning 101 this month, still willing and able to teach and explain right and wrong.
Amelia is not only the woman who began helping people's voting
rights in the 1920s who later had the 1965 Voting Rights Act written at
her Alabama home -- she's also historically important to the many
American struggles for over 85 years towards civil, farmers, minorities
and poor people's rights.
Monuments will continue to be made in
her honor in metal and stone by future generations. But right now her
history making life needs to be known by we the living, for which
purpose a documentary film will greatly assist.
Amelia is the
woman who hosted the Selma marches' planning meetings and later was
injured by police abuse at the bridge. But long before the 1960s, she
was known nationally as a powerful organizer and leader of several long
and painful crusades. When she attended Tuskeegee Institute, she saw so
many social, educational and economic problems in Alabama, that she and
her equally dedicated husband Sam Boynton decided to stay there the
rest of their lives to help others. She is still living there today.
We must make this documentary film -- tentative tile "The Matriarch
of the Voting Rights Movement" -- while Amelia Boynton is still alive
and willing to provide her newest thoughts to go with the existing
historical images and ideas.
For further information about Amelia and about how you can participate in the project.
Feel free to contact Shawn Eckles at 704 450 0214.
Amelia Boynton Robinson
I am an author, playwright, speaker and organizer, although I am most well known as a veteran of the original American Civil Rights Movement, having been beaten and gassed at the march on the Edmund Pettus Bridge. That march awakened America's sleeping conscience, and mobilized the nation to apply the US Constitution to all its citizens, with the passage of the Voting Rights Act in 1965.
Sunday, August 5, 2012
Amelia Boynton Robinson
Amelia
Platts was born on August 18, 1911 in
Savannah, Georgia. Her parents, George
Platts and Anna Eliza Hicks Platts were both descendants of Africans,
Native Americans, and Germans who had not been enslaved. Her
great-grandfather, Bart Hicks, came to America from Africa as a free
man, and a professional builder. His son, her grandfather, Anthony
Hicks, had a half-brother who was a slave and bought his freedom,
named Robert Hicks Smalls. Robert Smalls, Amelia's great-uncle,
became one of the first African-American members of the U.S.
Congress, elected during the reconstruction era. Robert Smalls is the
real-life role model for Joshua Terrell, the hero in the play Amelia
wrote titled Through
the Years (Wertz,
2001).
The
birth of the Civil Rights Movement
Amelia began her journey toward
voting rights and civil rights in 1920 when she was just 11 years
old. Alongside her mother, who obtained her right to vote in 1920,
handed out voter registration cards from a buggy and encouraged other
black women to register to vote. In her autobiography, Bridge
Across Jordan
Amelia describes her family life as a "sheltered,"
environment where church and biblical teachings were emphasized
(Bryant, 2009).
During an interview with documentary filmmaker Shawn Eckles, she
recalls a story of how her father taught the family how to save
money. She said that at an early age she knew that she had to work
if she wanted money. Her father gave them money when they helped him
in the lumber yard that he owned and operated (Personal interview).
Amelia
Platts started her college education at
Georgia State College (now Savannah State) and after two years
transferred and graduated from Tuskegee Institute (now Tuskegee
University),
in Tuskegee,
Alabama, earning a degree in home economics. (She later studied at
Tennessee State, Virginia State, and Temple University.) She had two
teaching jobs in Georgia before she took a position with the U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA) in Selma as the home demonstration
agent for Dallas
County. Amelia
educated the county's rural population about food production,
nutrition, healthcare, and other subjects related to agriculture and
homemaking (Bryant, 2009).
In 1930,
while in Selma and
working as a home economics teacher, Platts became
re-acquainted with Sam William Boynton, an extension agent for the
county who she met while studying at Tuskegee
Institute.
In 1933, Amelia and
Rev. Frederick Reece founded the Dallas County Voters League (DCVL)
(Wertz, 2001), In 1934,
at the age of twenty-three, Amelia became one of the few registered
African American voters. In an era where literacy tests were used to
discriminate against African Americans seeking the right to vote.
Amelia used her status as a registered voter to assist other African
American applicants to become registered voters.
Amelia and Sam
Boynton married in 1936 and had two sons, Bill Jr. and Bruce Carver,
whose godfather was family friend George
Washington Carver.
Amelia and Sam worked side by side for more than 30 years to bring
voting rights, property ownership, and education to African Americans
in poor,
rural areas of Alabama (Bryant,
2009).
During the Great Depression,
Amelia conceived the idea of building a community center for African
Americans, as the local Selma community center excluded African
Americans. When her efforts to secure government funding failed, she
wrote a play, Through
the Years, to
bring hope
to the local African American community and raise the funds to build
the community center. The play tells the fictional life story of
Joshua Terrell, a man born into slavery who
overcomes his difficult life circumstances who eventually became a
U.S. congressman (History
Makers, 2007). The play was first performed in Selma at Hudson High
School in 1936 and is still performed today across the world (Wertz,
2001).
From
the late 1930s through the 1950s, Amelia continued to conduct African
American voter registration drives in Selma with little success.
Despite her tireless efforts, it took nearly 30 years to achieve any
measurable success in getting blacks registered to vote. In 1954,
Amelia met Martin Luther King Jr. and his wife, Coretta
Scott King,
in Montgomery at
the Dexter
Avenue Baptist Church,
where King served as pastor. Her sister-in-law was a member at the
church and invited her to meet King. Amelia respected and followed
the work King, but it was not until January 1964 that they began
working together (Wertz, 2001).
After losing his job because of his involvement in voter registration, Sam Boynton’s health began to decline (Personal interview). In 1958 while carrying on with his family’s civil rights legacy, Bruce Boynton decided not to move to the back of the bus at a white-only bus station in Richmond Va. During this time, Bruce was a student at Howards Law School so he informed the school of his arrest. His case, Boynton v. Virginia No 7 led to the Supreme Court ruling outlawing segregation in interstate transportation facilities which set the pace for the freedom rides of (Olson, 340). In 1963 Bill Boynton died. Following his death, Amelia’s home and office in Selma became the center of Selma's civil rights battles, used by King and his lieutenants, by Congressmen and attorneys from around the nation, to plan the demonstrations known as the "Selma to Montgomery marches" (Nationmaster.com, 2010).
On February 29, 1964, Amelia became the first African American woman ever to seek a seat in Congress in Alabama. She was also the first woman to run for this office in the state, winning ten percent of the vote when only five percent of the registered voters were African American. The following year, Amelia along with many others began to organize the famous first march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge which was later named Bloody Sunday.
Bloody Sunday
It
all came to a head on a Sunday in 1965 when Amelia, then a widow,
joined hundreds of other activists as they tried to walk From Selma
to Montgomery to urge Gov. George Wallace to ease voter registration
barriers for blacks. According to the
New York Times, there were 525 Negroes
both young and old, that had left Browns Chapel and walked six blocks
to Broad Street, where they would then cross the Edmond Pettus
Bridge. Waiting at the Bridge there were more than 50 troopers and
volunteers waiting to stop the negros from marching across the
bridge. Behind and around the troopers were a few dozen possemen on
horses, an estimated 100 white spectators and about 50 Negroes who
stood watching beside a yellow school bus away from the troopers
(Reed, March 7,1965). Amelia recalls that the troopers stood
shoulder to shoulder in a line across both sides of the four-lane
highway. They put on gas masks and held their nightsticks ready as
the Negroes approached. As we marched closer, a voice came over an
amplifying system commanding us to stop and giving us a two-minit
warning to turn around and march back to Browns Chapel or to our
homes. After a moment of silence a major commanded the troops to
advance (Personal interview). The first 10 or 20 Negroes were swept
to the ground screaming, arms and legs flying and packs and bags went
skittering across the grassy divider strip and on to the pavement on
both sides. Those still on their feet retreated. Amelia
was gassed and beaten, and a photo of her left for dead and video
footage of the police beatings on Edmund Pettus Bridge, went around
the world more people began to support the Civil
Rights Movement.
At least 17 Negroes were hospitalized
with injuries and about 40 more were given emergency treatment for
minor injuries and tear gas effects. The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr., who was to have led the march, was in Atlanta (Reed, March
7,1965).
Life
After the Civil Rights Movement
She sued Sheriff clark …In 1969,
Amelia married Bob W. Billups, a musician who later became an
electronics technician, lived in New York City a short time before
returning to Selma. After only four years of marriage, he drowned in
a tragic boating accident in South Carolina. Amelia then reconnected
with Tuskegee classmate and fellow choir member, James Robinson. Once
they were married, she moved to Tuskegee, Al.
In 1983,
Amelia was introduced to the LaRouche Movement, and a year later, she
became a board member and then vice-chairperson of the Schiller
Institute. The Schiller Institute was founded to defend the rights of
all humanity. After the death of James
Robinson in 1988, Amelia remained in Tuskegee and continues her work
in civil and human rights on a national and international level. In
1990, Amelia received the Martin Luther King Jr. Freedom Medal in
honor of her life's work for the advancement of human rights. The
Schiller Institute published Robinson's autobiography, Bridge
Across the Jordan, in
1991(Bryant, 2009). The National
Visionary Leadership Award in 2003;
and in2005,
Amelia and her deceased husband, Sam Boynton, were honored on the
Fortieth Anniversary of Bloody Sunday in Selma (History
Makers, 2007).
In 2004 Robinson
sued The
Walt Disney Company for
defamation, asking for between $1 and $10 million in damages. She
contended that the 1999 TV
movie "Selma, Lord, Selma", a docudrama
based on a book written by two young participants in Bloody Sunday,
falsely depicted her as a stereotypical "black Mammy" whose
key role was to "make religious utterances and to participate in
singing spirituals and protest songs." She lost the case
(Nationmaster.com,
2010). She went to
sheriff clarks funeral.
Amelia
Wax Museum
Amelia
Boynton Robinson lived in the house for 50 years,
What
distressed her to no end was watching her house slowly fall apart
before her eyes over the years.
"It
brings me to tears whenever I see it," she said. "I won't
drive by it. I can't stand to see what has become of it."
Last
October, the Alabama Historical Commission added the house to its
"Places in Peril" list, raising awareness, especially in
civil rights circles.
The
house, which was used as a headquarters to plan the protests, has
changed hands several times in recent years, but the Browns say the
buck stops with them.
Carver
Boynton, Amilias granddaughter grew up in the house and has fond
memories of it, said Tuesday that she did not realize the historic
significance of it until she was in college.
"When
I became a young adult I really began to appreciate what it meant to
the movement," said Boynton, 35. "It's so sad to see what
it's become today, and that's why I'm excited about the idea of
turning it into a wax museum. I think it can work."
Celebrating
Dr. Boynton Robinson’s 99th birthday, her lifetime of service as
America’s Mother of
the Voting Rights movement, and announcing the launch of the Amelia &
Samuel W. Boynton Museum in Selma, Alabama.
Matriarch of the Voting Rights Movement Documentary project.
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