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  1. Klan member. Samuel Bowers. Freedom Summer, also known as the Freedom Summer Project or the Mississippi Summer Project, was a volunteer campaign in the United States launched in June 1964 to attempt to register as many African-American voters as possible in Mississippi.

  2. Freedom Summer (en español: Verano de la Libertad), o el Proyecto Mississippi Summer, fue una campaña de registro de votantes de 1964 que tenía el propósito de aumentar el número de votantes negros registrados en Misisipi. Duró entre el 14 de junio de 1964 y el 20 de agosto de 1964. [1]

  3. 29 de oct. de 2009 · Freedom Summer, or the Mississippi Summer Project, was a 1964 voter registration drive aimed at increasing the number of registered Black voters in Mississippi.

  4. The murders of Chaney, Goodman, and Schwerner, also known as the Freedom Summer murders, the Mississippi civil rights workers' murders, or the Mississippi Burning murders, were the abduction and murder of three activists in Philadelphia, Mississippi, in June 1964, during the Civil Rights Movement.

  5. The 1964 Freedom Summer project was designed to draw the nation’s attention to the violent oppression experienced by Mississippi blacks who attempted to exercise their constitutional rights, and to develop a grassroots freedom movement that could be sustained after student activists left Mississippi.

  6. www.blackpast.org › african-american-history › freedom-summer-1964Freedom Summer (1964) - Blackpast

    23 de jun. de 2016 · Freedom Summer (June-August, 1964) was a nonviolent effort by civil rights activists to integrate Mississippis segregated political system. It began late in 1963 when the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) decided to recruit several hundred northern college students, mostly ...

  7. 29 de oct. de 2020 · The Freedom Summer Project resulted in various meetings, protests, freedom schools, freedom housing, freedom libraries, and a collective rise in awareness of voting rights and disenfranchisement experienced by African Americans in Mississippi.