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  • The Panolian

    Civil rights pioneer McLemore shares Freedom Summer truth

    By Staff reports,

    1 day ago
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    Civil rights pioneer McLemore shares Freedom Summer truth
    By Sid Salter
    Columnist
    Think about a powerful public speaker with the clarity and power of a
    Barack Obama. Then think about a distinguished educator who can capitative and
    motivate his students. Then imagine a politician unafraid to stand up for the rights of his
    constituents in the toughest political arena of all – local politics.
    That’s Dr. Leslie Burl McLemore. Tall, lean and dapper, he is still a triple threat.
    From humble beginnings 84 years ago in Walls, Mississippi, Dr. McLemore reminded
    Mississippi State University students that despite a long and distinguished career in
    both academics and public service it remains his status as a “living witness” to 1964’s
    “Freedom Summer” that is his most important legacy.
    Last week, the MSU Libraries honored the 60th anniversary of 1964’s Freedom
    Summer with an Aug. 30 lecture from McLemore in the John Grisham Room at Mitchell
    Memorial Library. McLemore received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the
    Mississippi Historical Society.
    During his high school days in Walls, McLemore said he was bluntly confronted with the
    inarguable disparities between his educational opportunities in segregated Mississippi
    schools and those of white students in his home county. After high school, he enrolled
    in the private historically Black Rust College at Holly Springs – affiliated with the
    University Methodist Church.
    During his days at the private Rust College in Holly Springs, McLemore started the
    college’s chapter of the NAACP and became involved with the Student Nonviolent
    Coordinating Committee to help with voter registration. He was also a regional
    coordinator for the 1963 Freedom Ballot campaign.
    McLemore shared with MSU students his mother’s reaction to him taking leadership
    roles in the NAACP and with voter registration efforts associated with the 1963 Freedom
    Ballot. He said his mother’s long-ago question remains with him: “Have you lost your
    mind?”

    The Mississippi Freedom Ballot in 1963 was a mock election designed to create
    awareness and courage as Black Mississippians sought to overcome
    disenfranchisement. The campaign – a joint effort of COFO (the Council of Federated
    Organizations) and SNCC (the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee) ultimately
    empowered over 78,000 voters and is credited with the creation of the Mississippi
    Freedom Democratic Party.
    After Rust College, McLemore would earn a master’s degree in political science from
    Atlanta University and a doctoral degree in Government from the University of
    Massachusetts-Amherst. There, he founded the W.E.B. DuBois School of African
    American Studies.
    He was awarded fellowships at Harvard and Johns Hopkins before taking a teaching
    position at Jackson State University and became the founding chair of the Department
    of Political Science. Later, he would be named dean of the JSU Graduate School and
    Director of the Office of Research. McLemore served as interim president of JSU when
    MSU President Mark Keenum took the helm in Starkville, an association both recalled
    during their remarks at State.
    McLemore gave his MSU audience an unvarnished assessment of the dangers he and
    his activist colleagues faced in Mississippi in the 1950s and 1960s. He recalled the
    memories of his fellow “living witnesses” to those chapters in Mississippi’s history.
    To current MSU students, he offered this advice: “If you’re looking for a good term-
    paper, thesis or dissertation topic, think about getting to know more about Bob Moses.
    He helped bring meaningful change to Mississippi, to the South and to our country.”
    McLemore served on the Jackson City Council (as president and as a member) for a
    decade, served as interim mayor of the City of Jackson following the sudden death of
    former Mayor Frank Melton. He later served on the Board of Aldermen in his native
    Walls, where he moved after retiring from JSU.
    Sixty years after Freedom Summer, McLemore’s generation still has much to teach.
    Sid Salter is a syndicated columnist. Contact him at sidsalter@sidsalter.com.

    The post Civil rights pioneer McLemore shares Freedom Summer truth appeared first on The Panolian .

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