Derby, Doris. “Fannie Lou Hamer, after speaking at the National Democratic Convention, Chicago, Illinois, 1968,” From A Civil Rights Journey (MACK, 2021).

Fannie Lou Hamer and Freedom Farmers (Sunflower County, MS)

Fannie Lou Hamer forged a new path for rural Black people to escape poverty and hunger. In 1960 she set aside her years of voting rights activism to build an innovative new system — cooperative farming. Her Freedom Farm Cooperative, which enabled Black families to own and cultivate land communally, trading work on the farm for a share of the crops they produced, fed 1,600 families by 1972 and became the prototype for the modern food banking system.

LaDonna Redmond and Monica M. White, Freedom Farmers: Agricultural Resistance and the Black Freedom Movement (UNC Press, 2018).

Where is it located in the Museum?

Fannie Lou Hamer and Freedom Farmers (Sunflower County, MS)

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