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Civil Rights Road Trip - Birmingham and Anniston

a group of people posing for a photo on stairs

Students start their day in Birmingham with a tour of the 16th Street Baptist Church. The church is still active today, and during the Civil Rights Movement, it served as a meeting place for the organization of marches and other civil rights activities.

a woman in a blue cape holding a cup of coffee

Miles College President Bobbie Knight visits with students in Birmingham. Knight was elected in August 2019 as the fifteenth president and first woman to serve in this role. Miles is a private, liberal arts historically Black college with roots in the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church.

a group of people posing for a photo

Dr. Jonathan McPherson (front left), Dr. Richard Arrington and Miles College President Bobbie Knight share stories about the Civil Rights Movement, Martin Luther King Jr. and the work that is still needed to improve race relations.

a man in a suit pointing

Dr. Jonathan McPherson was a chemistry professor at Miles College when he served as a bodyguard for Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. He described the work he did alongside King, and helped protect the civil rights leader when he stayed in Birmingham at a house on “Dynamite Hill.” The neighborhood was given that name, McPherson explained, because of the many bombing by the Ku Klux Klan.

a man in a suit and tie

Dr. Richard Arrington was elected the first Black mayor of Birmingham in 1979, and served for 20 years. Arrington discussed how he focused on addressing police brutality while in office, and the importance of hiring more people of color to serve in important local government roles. Today, Arrington is a Miles College alumnus and serves as a Distinguished Professor.

a group of people walking on a sidewalk

Students explore the Birmingham Civil Rights District.

a statue of a man holding a book

A Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. statue in Birmingham, Alabama's Kelly Ingram Park, sits across from the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute and 16th Street Baptist Church.

a group of people walking on a street corner with 16th Street Baptist Church in the background

In 1963, the 16th Street Baptist Church was bombed, resulting in the deaths of four young black girls: Addie Mae Collins, Cynthia Wesley, Denise McNair and Carole Robertson. This event galvanized the federal government to take action on civil rights legislation.

a blue and white sign with white letters

In 1963, the 16th Street Baptist Church was bombed, resulting in the deaths of four young black girls: Addie Mae Collins, Cynthia Wesley, Denise McNair and Carole Robertson. This event galvanized the federal government to take action on civil rights legislation.

a man wearing a face mask

Homemade bombs planted by white supremacists in homes and churches became so commonplace that the city was sometimes known as “Bombingham.”

a stained glass window in a church

On the same side that the bomb went off, a large stained-glass mural of Jesus stands. Being on the same side as the bomb it should have been destroyed, but only the face of Jesus was damaged, leaving the rest of the mural intact. The tour guide explained that many believed that this happened because “not even God could look at what happened that day in 1963.”

a group of people sitting in a church

The 16th Street Baptist Church is still active today, and every year on the anniversary of the bombing, the church bells in downtown Birmingham will toll at 10:22 a.m., and a memorial wreath will be laid.

a group of men standing outside

Hunter Seidler ’22 and Jamari Washington ’22 reflect on lessons learned after visiting the church.

a woman wearing a black sweatshirt with white text

Dr. Shamira Gelbman, associate professor of political science, addresses students before a visit to the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute. Museum visitors can experience a rendition of a segregated city in the 1950s, as well as examine a replica of a Freedom Riders bus and even the actual jail cell door from behind which Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. penned his famous “Letter From Birmingham Jail.”

a man wearing a mask in front of a barber shop

Nate Butts ’23 and Logan Smith ’23 take a stop inside the museum’s “Barriers Gallery.” From its earliest days, from the 1920s-1950s, Birmingham was a city of two worlds: Black and White. People lived and worked side by side, however, double standards and segregation of all races were facts of life.

a group of people looking at a stained glass window

The Birmingham Civil Rights Institute has photos and a piece of stained glass on display from the historic bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church.

a man wearing a mask and a hoodie looking at a painting

Heisman Skeens ’23 and Horacio Garcia-Rojas ’23 stop to read about racial stereotypes depicted in advertising and entertainment throughout history. One example on display included the creating of the Aunt Jemima mammy logo.

a man standing in front of a display

Carter Nevil ’24 stops and reads information displayed within the “Human Rights Gallery” exhibit.

a group of people posing for a photo

Students stop for a photo with a new George Floyd painting on display at the museum. Floyd was murdered in 2020 by a police officer in Minneapolis, Minnesota, during an arrest after a store clerk suspected he may have used a counterfeit bill. His death spurred nationwide protests against police brutality.

a mural on a wall

The Civil Rights Immersion Road Trip included a stop in Anniston where a Greyhound bus carrying Freedom Riders in 1961 were met violence by an armed white mob, led by Ku Klux Klan leader William Chapel.

a group of people standing on a side walk

Students visited various sites and markers that honored the Freedom Riders’ influence on the Civil Rights Movement.

a group of men standing on a sidewalk

Freedom Riders were groups of white and Black civil rights activists who participated in bus trips through the South in 1961 to protest segregated bus terminals. The groups were confronted by arresting police officers and violence from protestors along their routes.

a brick wall with a bus painted on it

The site of the 1961 bus burning and the former Greyhound station in downtown Anniston are now part of the National Park Service and are dedicated to the Freedom Riders’ achievements in the fight for civil rights.

a group of people standing in front of a wall with a picture of a bus

The site of the 1961 bus burning and the former Greyhound station in downtown Anniston are now part of the National Park Service and are dedicated to the Freedom Riders’ achievements in the fight for civil rights.


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