10 Forgotten Martyrs: Unsung Heroes of the Civil Rights Era

by Marcus Ribeiro

When you think of the civil rights movement, names like Martin Luther King, Malcolm X, and Medgar Evers instantly spring to mind. Yet the tapestry of sacrifice includes many more heroes—10 forgotten martyrs whose courage helped reshape America. Their stories deserve to be told and their legacies honored.

Remembering 10 Forgotten Martyrs of the Civil Rights Era

10 Jimmie Lee Jackson

Jimmie Lee Jackson - 10 forgotten martyrs of civil rights

Jimmie Lee Jackson, an Army veteran from Alabama, became the emblematic figure whose tragic death helped ignite the Voting Rights Act. Like countless black Alabamians, he was repeatedly stymied by absurd barriers whenever he tried to register to vote. After numerous failed attempts, he joined a gathering of 400 people on February 18, 1965, at a Marion church where they sang, prayed, and exchanged stories from Selma’s beleaguered voters.

When the congregation left the sanctuary to march toward the jail, state troopers in riot gear descended upon them. Photographers were forcibly repelled, their cameras smashed, erasing any visual record of the night’s brutality. In the chaos, Jackson, his mother, and his elderly grandfather sought refuge in a nearby store. A trooper shoved his mother to the floor; when Jackson moved to protect her, the trooper drew a pistol and shot him twice at point‑blank range, striking his abdomen. He lingered for several days before succumbing to his wounds.

Just four days later, the same crowd reconvened for the historic Selma‑to‑Montgomery march that would become known as Bloody Sunday—this time captured by the press. Nationwide outrage surged, prompting President Lyndon B. Johnson to sign the Voting Rights Act of 1965 in August. The trooper responsible for Jackson’s death was finally tried in 2010, receiving a six‑month sentence for second‑degree manslaughter and being released early.

9 Clyde Kennard

Clyde Kennard - 10 forgotten martyrs of civil rights

Clyde Kennard, a Korean War veteran, left the University of Chicago in 1955 to return to his hometown of Hattiesburg, Mississippi, to care for his mother. Determined to finish his education, he set his sights on the all‑white Mississippi Southern College (now the University of Southern Mississippi). Despite multiple formal applications and personal appeals, school officials erected endless obstacles, and the secretive Mississippi Sovereignty Commission launched a campaign to discredit him.

Undeterred by the campaign, Kennard’s impeccable record could not be tarnished—until officials fabricated a felony charge of stealing $25 worth of chicken feed. An all‑white jury, after a mere ten‑minute deliberation, sentenced him to the maximum seven years of hard labor. While incarcerated for a crime he didn’t commit, Kennard fell gravely ill with intestinal cancer. Prison officials refused treatment, and he endured brutal labor until protests forced his early release. He died six months later, never bitter, and two years after his death the first black students were finally admitted to the college he had fought to join.

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8 Juliette Hampton Morgan

Juliette Hampton Morgan - 10 forgotten martyrs of civil rights

Juliette Hampton Morgan, a well‑educated white Southern belle, seemed to have every advantage—wealth, prestige, and a respectable position as a librarian in Montgomery. Yet her inability to drive forced her onto city buses, where she witnessed the appalling treatment of black passengers. Incensed, she began penning letters to the local newspaper, demanding fair treatment for black riders.

Her outspoken advocacy made her a target: she endured taunts at work, mockery from bus drivers and white passengers, and public humiliation. The hostility escalated when a cross was burned onto her lawn. Undeterred, she kept writing, but death threats and attempts to have her dismissed piled up. Overwhelmed, she resigned on July 15, 1957, and was found dead the following morning from an intentional overdose of pills. Martin Luther King Jr. later praised her in his book, noting she was the first to draw parallels between the movement and Gandhi. In 2005, she was posthumously inducted into the Alabama Women’s Hall of Fame.

7 Rev. James Reeb

Rev. James Reeb - 10 forgotten martyrs of civil rights

Rev. James Reeb, a white Unitarian minister serving a poor black neighborhood in Boston, answered Dr. King’s call for clergy to join the Selma march. At 38, he was a father of four and wholly committed to civil‑rights activism. While in Selma, he and two fellow white ministers left a diner and were set upon by three white men. Reeb was brutally clubbed, slipped into a coma, and died the next day.

Reeb’s murder, alongside those of Jimmie Lee Jackson and Viola Liuzzo, shone an unforgiving light on Southern violence. The evening of his memorial service, President Johnson made a heartfelt plea to Congress to advance the Voting Rights Act, which was subsequently passed that summer.

6 Jonathan Myrick Daniels

Jonathan Myrick Daniels - 10 forgotten martyrs of civil rights

Jonathan Myrick Daniels, a seminary student at Episcopal Divinity School in Cambridge, Massachusetts, answered Dr. King’s invitation to support the Selma‑to‑Montgomery march. After a demonstration at Fort Deposit, Alabama, Daniels and 22 others were arrested and transferred to a county jail in Hayneville. Released on August 20, he accompanied Catholic priest Richard Morrisroe and two black teenage girls—recently jailed for protesting—to a nearby store.

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On the store’s porch, a construction worker who also served as a part‑time deputy brandished a shotgun at 17‑year‑old Ruby Sales. Daniels threw himself over Sales, taking the bullet and saving her life, while the priest was seriously wounded. Dr. King later hailed Daniels’ act as “one of the most heroic Christian deeds” he had ever heard. Ruby Sales went on to become a nationally recognized activist, founding the Spirit House, an organization that blends social, economic, and racial justice with spiritual principles.

5 Viola Gregg Liuzzo

Viola Gregg Liuzzo - 10 forgotten martyrs of civil rights

Viola Gregg Liuzzo, a Detroit mother of five and a dedicated NAACP member, earned the somber distinction of being the only white woman murdered during the civil‑rights era. She traveled to Alabama to assist the Selma‑to‑Montgomery march, ferrying supporters between the two cities. On the evening of March 21, 1965, while driving a black teenager named Leroy Moton to Selma, a vehicle pulled alongside them on Highway 80 and opened fire, killing Liuzzo instantly. Moton survived by playing dead.

Over 300 mourners, including Dr. King, U.S. Attorney Lawrence Gubow, labor leader Jimmy Hoffa, and UAW President, attended her funeral. Her death spurred President Johnson to launch a federal investigation into the Ku Klux Klan’s activities.

4 Vernon Dahmer

Vernon Dahmer - 10 forgotten martyrs of civil rights

Born in 1908, Vernon Dahmer was a businessman in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, owning a sawmill, a grocery store, and several other ventures. As president of the local NAACP chapter, he championed voter registration for black citizens. In January 1966, he announced on a local radio station that he would accept poll‑tax payments at his store, sparing people the long trek to the courthouse, even offering to pay the $2 tax for those who could not afford it.

The following night, three carloads of Klansmen descended on his home, shooting and dousing a dozen one‑gallon gasoline containers with fire. The blaze ignited, killing Dahmer twelve hours later. His wife, youngest children, and elderly aunt escaped, though his daughter suffered severe burns. Four of his eldest sons were serving in the U.S. military at the time. While four men received sentences of less than ten years, nine escaped punishment. The mastermind remained free until his fifth trial in 1998, when he finally received a life sentence and died in prison in 2006.

3 Oneal Moore

Oneal Moore - 10 forgotten martyrs of civil rights

On June 2, 1965, Oneal Moore celebrated his one‑year anniversary as the first African‑American police officer in Washington Parish, Louisiana. He and his fellow black officer, Creed Rogers, were heading to Moore’s home for dinner after their shift when a pickup truck full of three men approached. Gunfire erupted; a bullet struck Moore in the head, killing him instantly, while another wounded Rogers, blinding him.

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No one has ever been formally charged. The case was reopened three times by the FBI, yet the prime suspect died in 2003. Moore’s widow continues to live in Hattiesburg, sharing the home they built together, and he left behind four daughters ranging from nine years old to an infant. In 2013, a memorial was planned to honor Moore and all fallen police officers from the area.

2 Rev. George Lee

Rev. George Lee - 10 forgotten martyrs of civil rights

Rev. George Lee, born in Mississippi, served as a pastor in the town of Belzoni during the 1930s. He was an active NAACP member, using his pulpit to urge his black congregation to register to vote and even operating a printing press to spread the message. White officials offered him protection on the condition that he remove his name from voter rolls and cease encouraging others to register. He refused.

On May 7, 1955, Lee died under suspicious circumstances. Witnesses reported seeing several white men fire a shotgun into his car, leaving pellet‑laced damage in the tires and his face. The sheriff dismissed the pellets as mere dental fillings, despite lead never being used in fillings. The governor refused further investigation, and Lee’s death was officially recorded as an accident. No one was ever charged.

1 Harry And Harriette Moore

Harry and Harriette Moore - 10 forgotten martyrs of civil rights

Harry and Harriette Moore stand alone as the only married couple murdered during the civil‑rights movement. On Christmas Day 1955, a firebomb placed directly beneath their bedroom detonated with such force that their bed was thrown through the rafters of their Mims, Florida home. Both were educators deeply involved in the NAACP, focusing on equal pay for black and white teachers and fighting segregation. Harry later turned his advocacy toward the more perilous issues of police brutality and lynchings.

The blast killed Harry instantly; Harriette succumbed to her injuries nine days later. The couple left behind two daughters. Though the explosion was initially dubbed “the bomb heard round the world,” their legacy faded over time, with no one ever charged for the murders.

Katlyn Joy is a freelance writer based in Denver, Colorado. She tutors students in history and language arts and is a mother of seven children. Her passion lies in helping others remember the heroes of the movement whose stories risk being lost to history.

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