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Bloody Sunday: The 54-Mile March That Shook America's Soul
Published on:
7th March, 2025
# BLOODY SUNDAY: THE SELMA VOTING RIGHTS MARCH OF 1965
## Episode Description
The story of how one fateful day in Selma, Alabama became a turning point in the Civil Rights Movement. This episode chronicles the events of Bloody Sunday, when peaceful protesters seeking voting rights faced brutal violence on the Edmund Pettus Bridge, sparking national outrage and leading to the passage of the Voting Rights Act.
## Key Timestamps
[00:03:15] Setting the scene in 1965 Selma
[00:08:30] Planning the march to Montgomery
[00:12:45] Confrontation at Edmund Pettus Bridge
[00:17:20] National response to Bloody Sunday
[00:22:10] Passage of the Voting Rights Act
## Key Historical Figures
• John Lewis (1940-2020): SNCC Chairman, civil rights leader
• Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. (1929-1968): Civil rights leader
• Amelia Boynton (1911-2015): Selma voting rights activist
• Governor George Wallace (1919-1998): Segregationist Alabama governor
## Episode Summary
In March 1965, Selma, Alabama became ground zero for the voting rights movement. With only 2% of eligible Black voters registered in Dallas County, civil rights leaders organized a peaceful march to Montgomery. On March 7, approximately 600 marchers led by John Lewis encountered state troopers at the Edmund Pettus Bridge. The ensuing violence, broadcast nationwide, horrified Americans and catalyzed support for voting rights legislation. Within months, President Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act, dramatically expanding Black voter registration across the South.
## Quotable Moments
"We were beaten, we were tear gassed. I thought I was going to die on this bridge. But I am here to tell you, we cannot give up now." - John Lewis
"There is no constitutional issue here. There is no moral issue. It is wrong - deadly wrong - to deny any of your fellow Americans the right to vote." - President Johnson
## Discussion Question
How did media coverage of Bloody Sunday change public opinion about the civil rights movement? What parallels exist between the voting rights struggles of 1965 and today?
## Keywords
#CivilRights #BroodySunday #Selma #VotingRights #JohnLewis #MLK #AmericanHistory #1960s #Alabama #SocialJustice
## Call to Action
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