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    Home»Community Picks»Moss Point to Commemorate its Freedom Summer History
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    Moss Point to Commemorate its Freedom Summer History

    USM Roy Howard Community Journalism CenterBy USM Roy Howard Community Journalism CenterJuly 3, 20266 Mins Read0 Views
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    Located at 4331 Bowen St., Moss Point’s Victory Lodge was the site of the Victory School, where attendees learned about civic engagement and Black history. (Justin Glowacki)
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    Moss Point will soon commemorate its role in the civil rights movement through a memorial project led by the Mississippi Humanities Council.  

    The memorial will become part of the Mississippi Freedom Trail, which includes more than 30 sites recognizing people and places connected to the civil rights movement. John Spann, strategic operations coordinator for the Mississippi Humanities Council, said the Witness: The Freedom Memory Project focuses on communities whose civil rights history has received less public recognition. Memorials are also planned for McComb, Jackson and Drew, and applications for future projects are expected to open in 2027.  

    A woman wearing a black blouse gestures with one hand while standing outside a wood-sided building.
    Anne’ McMillion is the community lead for Moss Point’s memorial building project. In this role, McMillion collects stories from Moss Point residents who lived through Freedom Summer to help inform the final memorial. (Justin Glowacki)

    “It’s really to design a monument of some sort to honor these towns’ civil rights history that may not be as well-known,” Spann said. “We collect oral histories of folks who either have lived experiences, they knew the people that are being uplifted, they’ve lived in the time period and can express how life was back then and can speak to what people were going through and why it’s important to memorialize (those stories).” 

    Moss Point native John Davis is among those sharing his experiences. At 17, Davis volunteered during Freedom Summer, the 1964 campaign organized by civil rights groups including the Council of Federated Organizations and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee to register Black voters and expand voter education across Mississippi. 

    In 1962, fewer than 7% of eligible Black Mississippians were registered to vote because of barriers including Jim Crow laws and voter intimidation. More than 700 volunteers participated in Freedom Summer, a campaign historians credit with helping build momentum for the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Voting Rights Act of 1965. 

    A black-and-white document lists violent incidents across Mississippi, with dates arranged in a column along the left side.
    As seen at the Two Mississippi Museums in Jackson, Mississippi, Freedom Summer organizers kept detailed logs documenting violence against voting rights advocates and their property. The killings of volunteers James Chaney, Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner on June 21, 1964, prompted a federal investigation. (Gaven Wallace)

    Davis served as a troubleshooter, travelling across Mississippi to help organize voter registration efforts and address challenges in other counties. He said working alongside civil rights leaders like Bob Moses and Kwame Ture changed his understanding of segregation.   

    “That was the greatest experience in my life. It opened my eyes to what’s going on in the world, in this nation, in this state, and in my city,” Davis said. 

    Remembering Freedom Summer 

    Many of the sites associated with Freedom Summer in Moss Point remain standing. 

    Freedom schools, often held in churches and other community spaces, provided instruction in Black history, civics and voted education during the 1964 campaign.  

    Davis said attending a Freedom School in Moss Point introduced him to information about voting and voting registration that he had not learned in school. 

    “We had civics, but they didn’t teach us anything about voting, anything about participating in the system,” Davis said. “It wasn’t allowed then, not in the Black schools.” 

    Moss Point organizers held Freedom School classes at Victory Lodge on Bowen Street, while the Knights of Pythias Hall — also known as the KP Building — hosted mass meetings, social events and performances by artists including James Brown and B.B. King.  

    A two-story red brick building with a white-painted side wall and two white front doors.
    Located at 4331 Bowen St., Moss Point’s Victory Lodge was the site of the Victory School, where attendees learned about civic engagement and Black history. (Justin Glowacki)

    Neither building has a historical marker recognizing its role in the civil rights movement, and several historic buildings in Moss Point have fallen into disrepair.  

    “We didn’t take enough interest in places. We couldn’t see that far down the road at that time,” Davis said. “They didn’t realize the historical value of places then the way they do now.” 

    Davis described Moss Point as a community that responded actively to challenges during the civil rights movement. 

    “Moss Point was always aggressive. They would always go out and attack the situation and try to bring about a change whenever they could,” Davis said.  

    Anne’ McMillion, the Mississippi Humanities County’s community lead for the Moss Point project, agreed.  

    “Moss Point was one of those cities that was a fighter,” McMillion said. “You couldn’t come to this area and start dictating what you wanted to occur and happen because the individuals that lived here … they come from a bloodline of fighters.” 

    Planning the memorial 

    Spann said the project’s goal is to document civil rights history in smaller Mississippi communities through memorial and oral histories. 

    A wood-sided building in disrepair with damaged siding, patches of blue tarp on the roof and vines growing over the front roofline.
    The Knights of Pythias Hall, at 4242 Magnolia St., was where Freedom Summer organizers and volunteers gathered for mass meetings. The building was firebombed on June 23, 1964, but sustained only minor damage. (Justin Glowacki)

    “It all connects to the larger story of America’s civil rights movement,” Spann said. “Mississippi was a big part of that.” 

    Community members and project organizers are meeting regularly to collect oral histories and discuss the memorial’s design. Their next meeting is scheduled for July 23 at the Moss Point Library 

    McMillion said preserving those stories is as important as preserving buildings. 

    “It brings a lot of identity, self-pride. Also, the (continuation) of history,” McMillion said. “When the houses or buildings are no longer here standing, what else do you have that documented and showed you exactly what occurred and happened?” 

    McMillion estimated the project could take two to three years, although Spann said the council has not established a deadline for completion.   

    Organizers expect to spend much of that time collecting oral histories to help shape the memorial.  

    “That way we’re able to show that this is a project that supports the community, but it’s also about the community,” McMillion said. “It’s not a project where we’re developing something that we have no connection to.” 

    McMillion said many residents have welcomed the effort. 

    “So, so many have shared the delight that it’s finally time,” McMillion said. “A lot of them feel it’s been past that time, it’s overdue, but thank God, we got it now.” 

     

    Contributor: Gaven Wallace

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    USM Roy Howard Community Journalism Center

    At the Roy Howard Community Journalism Center at The University of Southern Mississippi, we are dedicated to empowering storytellers, strengthening communities, and fostering the vital role of journalism in our democracy.

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