Talk:March Against Fear
1969 Arkansas march
[edit]This was the closing paragraph of the text:
- In 2010, C. D. Wright, a MacArthur grant winner, published "One with Others" (Copper Canyon), a book-length poem about another March Against Fear across Eastern Arkansas in 1969 that includes a profile of Margaret Kaelin McHugh, a white woman from a small town. McHugh joined the march, and, for her trouble, was run out of her home town, and practically disowned by her husband, with whom she had seven children. McHugh wound up in a fleabag motel in Memphis, and was rescued by Wright and others from Memphis State College, who moved her into their student duplex.
It doesn't belong here simply. If the point is that 'March Against Fear' may refer to something else then a WP:HATnote is appropriate.
If some account should be included here because of a closer relation between the two events --perhaps both concern the African-American Civil Rights Movement (1955–68) (despite one-year mismatch in that title)-- then this Arkansas event should be covered in a separate section and with more background.
--P64 (talk) 21:54, 13 November 2013 (UTC)
Two marches? Two state police groups?
[edit]- second of two sections posted at once -P64
We say that the Mississippi State Police tear-gassed the march in Canton, MS.
Mississippi Highway Patrol#Brief history includes a proud paragraph on the positive role of MHP in the "1966 Meredith Mississippi March for Freedom" from Memphis to Jackson. "Guarded by the Mississippi Highway Patrol, the marchers were not attacked on their main route. The March concluded on June 26 with a rally of 15,000 people in Jackson ..."
That date 1966 June 26 matches this article--as do Meredith, Memphis, and Jackson--which implies that the March Against Fear and March for Freedom were the same march.
Perhaps there were two marches. Perhaps there were two agencies, one "police" agency opposed in Canton and "Highway Patrol" guarding the marchers, at least some places including Jackson. Perhaps there are mistakes in both articles.
- Start-Class Civil Rights Movement articles
- High-importance Civil Rights Movement articles
- WikiProject Civil Rights Movement articles
- Start-Class United States articles
- Low-importance United States articles
- Start-Class United States articles of Low-importance
- Start-Class Mississippi articles
- Low-importance Mississippi articles
- WikiProject Mississippi articles
- WikiProject United States articles