Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Fannie Lou Hamer Hamer and her husband wanted very much to start a family but in 1961, a white doctor subjected Hamer to a hysterectomy without her consent while she was undergoing surgery to remove a uterine tumor. Forced sterilization was a common method of population control in Mississippi that targeted poor, African-American women. Members of the Black community called the procedure a ...

  2. www.history.com › black-history › fannie-lou-hamerFannie Lou Hamer - HISTORY

    Nov 9, 2009 · Fannie Lou Hamer (1917-1977) was a civil rights activist whose passionate depiction of her own suffering in a racist society helped focus attention on the plight of African Americans throughout ...

  3. Hamer was born on October 6, 1917 in Montgomery County, Mississippi, the 20th and last child of sharecroppers Lou Ella and James Townsend. She grew up in poverty, and at age six Hamer joined her family picking cotton. By age 12, she left school to work. In 1944, she married Perry Hamer and the couple toiled on the Mississippi plantation owned ...

  4. Apr 2, 2014 · Interesting Facts. Fannie Lou Hamer was the youngest of 20 children. Fannie Lou Hamer was unable to have children after having a surgery to remove a tumor, and being given a hysterectomy without ...

    • editor@biography.com
    • Staff Editorial Team And Contributors
  5. Oct 2, 2024 · Fannie Lou Hamer (born October 6, 1917, Ruleville, Mississippi, U.S.—died March 14, 1977, Mound Bayou, Mississippi) was an African American civil rights activist who worked to desegregate the Mississippi Democratic Party. The youngest of 20 children, Fannie Lou was working the fields with her sharecropper parents at the age of six.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. Oct 3, 2024 · Two years before she ran for Congress, Fannie Lou Hamer did not know she had the right to vote. According to Hamer, she first learned of this right at the age of forty-four. On August 27, 1962, Hamer attended a meeting organized by the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), an interracial civil rights organization, at a local church ...

  7. People also ask

  8. In 1977, Hamer passed away, and the crowd at her funeral included civil rights luminaries. Andrew Young, the United States ambassador to the United Nations, gave her eulogy, saying, according to the New York Times, that the seeds of social change in America “were sown here by the sweat and blood of you and Fannie Lou Hamer.”.

  1. People also search for