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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Casey_HaydenCasey Hayden - Wikipedia

    Casey Hayden was born Sandra Cason (a name she continued to use legally) on October 31, 1937, in Austin, Texas, [1] as a fourth-generation Texan. [2] She was raised in Victoria, Texas, in a "multigenerational matriarchal family” [3] —by her mother, Eula Weisiger Cason ("the only divorced woman in town"), her mother's sister, and her grandmother.

  2. Jan 4, 2023 · Sandra Cason “Casey” Hayden. October 31, 1937 – January 4, 2023. “I Was Insulted About Laws Saying Who I Could Associate With.”. A force in the peace and social justice movements. Key organizer of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) during its civil rights drive in the early 1960s. Delegate to the United States ...

  3. Born on October 31, 1937, in Victoria, Texas, Sandra Cason Hayden was exposed to student racial politics when she entered the University of Texas as a We use cookies to enhance your experience on our website.By continuing to use our website, you are agreeing to our use of cookies.

    • About The Women's Papers in SNCC
    • About SNCC Culture
    • About Doing The Work: The Style. The Feeling

    The first of the two pieces of writing about women in which I had a hand was composed at the Waveland SNCC conference in the fall of 1964, an important setting. We were in disarray after the summer of '64 on all fronts. The field staff needed to regroup and plan, and the Atlanta administration needed to manage the overgrown staff and raise the mone...

    At the first of our historical reviews of SNCC in the mid eighties I was on a panel on women in SNCC. I cried all the way through my talk. That's how much the loss of SNCC still represented to me at that time. The other women were coherent, and talked to the topic. I talked about SNCC culture, rather incoherently, as it turned out, due to all that ...

    As a white Southerner, I considered the southern freedom movement against segregation mine as much as anyone else's. I was working for my right to be with whom I chose to be with as I chose to be with them. It was my freedom in question; however, when I worked full time in the black community , I was considered a guest of that community , which req...

  4. Casey Hayden (1937-2023, In Memory) SNCC, 1960-66, Texas, Georgia, Mississippi, New York, Michigan. Speech in support of the sit-ins to NSA conference. August 1960 In the Attics of My MindThe Help, the Movie Shining in Sunflower, review of Silver Rights Roots of Feminism in the Redemptive Community Anniversary of the February 1st, 1960 Sit-ins ...

  5. Based on months of informal conversations, the respected movement veterans Mary King and Casey Hayden circulated this memo to young women around the country. Their goal was simply to start a dialogue about women’s exclusion from structures of power and their subordination in personal relationships. Although King and Hay-den thought that ...

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  7. Sep 22, 2016 · A Kind of Memo. September 22, 2016. classic feminist writings. by Casey Hayden and Mary King (1965) This paper about women in social movements was one of the first documents of the emerging women's liberation movement. by Casey Hayden and Mary King (1965) (Editors Note: Casey Hayden and Mary King circulated this paper on women in the civil ...

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