AlonzoMourning23
03-01-2007, 02:54 AM
William L. Moore (April 28, 1927 – April 23, 1963) was a postal worker and Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) member who staged lone protests against racial segregation. He was murdered on his final protest.
He was born in Binghamton, New York and lived in Baltimore, Maryland.
All three of his protests consisted of walking to a capitol and hand-delivering letters he had written denouncing racial segregation.
On his first march he walked to Annapolis, Maryland, the state capitol. On his second march he walked to the White House. He arrived at about the same time that Martin Luther King, Jr. was being released from Birmingham jail. His letter to John F. Kennedy notified the president that he intended to walk to Mississippi and asked "If I may deliver any letters from you to those on my line of travel, I would be most happy to do so."
For his third protest he planned to walk from Chattanooga, Tennessee to Jackson, Mississippi and deliver a letter to Governor Ross Barnett urging him to accept integration. He was wearing two signboards: "END SEGREGATION IN AMERICA" and "EQUAL RIGHTS FOR ALL MEN".
On September 23, 1963, about 70 miles into his march, Moore was interviewed by Charlie Hicks, a reporter from radio station WGAD in Gadsden, Alabama, along a rural stretch of U.S. Highway 11 near Attalla, Alabama. The station had received an anonymous phone tip about Moore's location. In the interview Moore stated "I intend to walk right up to the governor's mansion in Mississippi and ring his door bell. Then I'll hand him my letter." Concerned for Moore's safety, Hicks offered to drive him to a motel. Moore insisted on continuing his march.
Less than an hour after the reporter left the scene a passing motorist found Moore's body about a mile farther down the road, shot twice in the head at close range with a .22 caliber rifle. The gun's ownership was traced to Floyd Simpson, whom Moore had argued with earlier that day. No arrests were ever made.
Moore's letter was found and opened. In it Moore reasoned that "the white man cannot be truly free himself until all men have their rights." He asked Governor Barnett to "Be gracious and give more than is immediately demanded of you...."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_L._Moore
MOBILE, Ala. More than 40 years have passed, but Mary Moore Birchard still grieves for her late husband, a New York postal worker who was on a one-man civil rights march when he was shot to death near Gadsden in 1963.
A reputed Ku Klux Klansman was charged in the shooting of William Moore, but he was never indicted or tried before he died eight years ago.
Moore, of Binghamton, New York, was 35 and on a mission in late April 1963. Raised in Mississippi, the former Marine set out on foot from Chattanooga to march through Alabama to protest racial segregation.
His journey ended on U-S 11 in the Etowah County community of Keener.
According to the Southern Poverty Law Center, Moore was killed by shots fired at close range from a .22-caliber rifle.
Ballistics tests showed the gun belonged to DeKalb County grocer Floyd Simpson of Collbran. He died in 1998 without the case ever being resolved.
http://www.wlox.com/global/story.asp?s=5055551&ClientType=Printable
He was born in Binghamton, New York and lived in Baltimore, Maryland.
All three of his protests consisted of walking to a capitol and hand-delivering letters he had written denouncing racial segregation.
On his first march he walked to Annapolis, Maryland, the state capitol. On his second march he walked to the White House. He arrived at about the same time that Martin Luther King, Jr. was being released from Birmingham jail. His letter to John F. Kennedy notified the president that he intended to walk to Mississippi and asked "If I may deliver any letters from you to those on my line of travel, I would be most happy to do so."
For his third protest he planned to walk from Chattanooga, Tennessee to Jackson, Mississippi and deliver a letter to Governor Ross Barnett urging him to accept integration. He was wearing two signboards: "END SEGREGATION IN AMERICA" and "EQUAL RIGHTS FOR ALL MEN".
On September 23, 1963, about 70 miles into his march, Moore was interviewed by Charlie Hicks, a reporter from radio station WGAD in Gadsden, Alabama, along a rural stretch of U.S. Highway 11 near Attalla, Alabama. The station had received an anonymous phone tip about Moore's location. In the interview Moore stated "I intend to walk right up to the governor's mansion in Mississippi and ring his door bell. Then I'll hand him my letter." Concerned for Moore's safety, Hicks offered to drive him to a motel. Moore insisted on continuing his march.
Less than an hour after the reporter left the scene a passing motorist found Moore's body about a mile farther down the road, shot twice in the head at close range with a .22 caliber rifle. The gun's ownership was traced to Floyd Simpson, whom Moore had argued with earlier that day. No arrests were ever made.
Moore's letter was found and opened. In it Moore reasoned that "the white man cannot be truly free himself until all men have their rights." He asked Governor Barnett to "Be gracious and give more than is immediately demanded of you...."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_L._Moore
MOBILE, Ala. More than 40 years have passed, but Mary Moore Birchard still grieves for her late husband, a New York postal worker who was on a one-man civil rights march when he was shot to death near Gadsden in 1963.
A reputed Ku Klux Klansman was charged in the shooting of William Moore, but he was never indicted or tried before he died eight years ago.
Moore, of Binghamton, New York, was 35 and on a mission in late April 1963. Raised in Mississippi, the former Marine set out on foot from Chattanooga to march through Alabama to protest racial segregation.
His journey ended on U-S 11 in the Etowah County community of Keener.
According to the Southern Poverty Law Center, Moore was killed by shots fired at close range from a .22-caliber rifle.
Ballistics tests showed the gun belonged to DeKalb County grocer Floyd Simpson of Collbran. He died in 1998 without the case ever being resolved.
http://www.wlox.com/global/story.asp?s=5055551&ClientType=Printable