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Sweet roam Alabama: a US RV trip

Take to the open road in America’s Deep South, ahead of next year’s 60th anniversary of the Civil Rights Act

November 19, 2023 18:30
Selma EdmundPettusBridgeFromRiverAtSunset CREDIT Art Meripol
The Edmund Pettus Bridge is a bridge that carries U.S. Route 80 across the Alabama River in Selma, Alabama. Built in 1940, it is named for Edmund Winston Pettus, a former Confederate brigadier general and U.S. Senator from Alabama. The bridge is a steel through arch bridge with a central span of 250 feet (76 m). It is famous as the site of the conflict of Bloody Sunday on March 7, 1965, when armed officers attacked peaceful civil rights demonstrators attempting to march to the state capital of Montgomery. The bridge was declared a National Historic Landmark on March 11, 2013.[1]
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Walking over the Edmund Pettus bridge in Selma, I felt my breath catch a little. On this spot in March 1965, 600 civil rights protesters attempted to cross the Alabama River and walk to Montgomery for the right to vote unencumbered.

On this spot, they instead met a wall of law enforcement who had been given the go-ahead to stop them — using whatever force necessary. Men, women and teenagers were beaten with nightsticks in an ambush that is now known as “Bloody Sunday”.

Footage of the peaceful marchers being attacked by troopers on horseback shocked the nation and, indeed, the world, causing an outcry that galvanised the civil rights movement’s support.

Thousands, including many Jews, were inspired to travel cross-country to join Martin Luther King Jr and the protesters, leaving President Lyndon Johnson little choice but to allow the march to eventually take place, and confirm legislation that would protect the voting rights of all citizens.