Amelia Boynton Robinson passed away Wednesday
 morning at the age of 104, and the nation is mourning one of the most 
storied individuals from the Civil Rights Movement. Boynton Robinson's 
dedication to the voting rights and equality for southern Blacks and all
 African-Americans has been well-documented, and her iconic image from 
the “Bloody Sunday” event still moves the hearts of many.
Boynton
 Robinson was born in Savannah, Ga. on August 18, 1911. Boynton 
Robinson's accounts of her early life are slightly conflicting but what 
is understood is that she attended her first two years of college at 
Georgia State College, which is now known as Savannah State University. 
She completed her studies at the Tuskegee Institute (now University) and
 earned a degree in Home Economics.
She
 continued her education at Tennessee State University, Virginia State 
University, and Temple University although what degrees or certificates 
she earned are largely unreported. After a stint as a teacher, Boynton 
Robinson worked in Dallas County as a home economics agent for the U.S. 
Department of Agriculture in Selma, Ala.
She
 met her co-worker and first husband in 1930, Samuel Boynton. The pair 
married in 1936, and were well known for organizing voting registration 
drives, and bettering African-American lives for nearly three decades.
Mr.
 Boynton passed in 1963, during a time where the Civil Rights Movement 
began to simmer. Boynton Robinson made her home a headquarters for 
voting rights activists, carrying with her the spirit of her support for
 the women's suffrage movement of the 1930's as well.
Along with Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) representatives Martin Luther King Jr. and James Bevel
 among several others, Boynton Robinson helped formulate plans for 
peaceful demonstrations regarding voting and civil rights in 1964 and 
1965.
She
 was among the hundreds of marchers who took to Edmund Pettus Bridge on 
March 7, 1965 in the Selma To Montgomery march in Alabama. Better known 
as “Bloody Sunday,” the incident showcased a violent response from white police authorities and others who sought to halt the peaceful march.
In one of the most iconic photos of "Bloody Sunday"
 shows a badly beaten Boynton Robinson cradled by another marcher. The 
images, especially Boynton Robinson's, spread globally, generation 
outrage.  Eventually, due to their efforts, the Voting Rights Act of 
1965 was passed into law by then President Lyndon B. Johnson.
Boynton
 Robinson married twice more, to musician Bob Billups, who died in 1973 
in a boating accident. She married former Tuskegee classmate James 
Robinson, who died in 1988.
In
 1990, Boynton Robinson was awarded the Martin Luther King Jr. Freedom 
Medal. In 2014, five blocks of Lapsley Street in Selma were renamed 
Boyntons Street in honor of she and her first husband.
At
 the top of the year, Boynton Robinson was a honored guest of President 
Barack Obama at his State Of The Union address, and was by his side 
(pictured) during the 50th anniversary of the Selma To Montgomery protest this past March.
1 comment:
May her soul rest in peace
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