♪ ANNOUNCER: In the summer of 1964, civil rights activists headed for the hostile and segregated state of Mississippi. They planned to start schools and register voters. Nonviolence, violence, and politics-- this was Freedom Summer. From the landmark series Eyes on the Prize, "Mississippi: Is This America?" There is no state with a record that approaches that of Mississippi in inhumanity, murder, brutality and racial hatred. It is absolutely at the bottom of the list. NARRATOR: In 1964, the state of Mississippi called it an invasion. Civil rights workers called it "Freedom Summer." To change Mississippi and the country, they would risk beatings, arrests and their lives. WOMAN: Y'all know what my child has done. He was trying for us all to make a better living. And he had two fellas from New York-- had their own home and everything. Didn't have nothing to worry about. But they come here to help us. Did y'all know they come here to help us? They died for us! ♪ I know the one thing we did right ♪ ♪ Was the day we started to fight ♪ ♪ Keep your eyes on the prize ♪ Hold on, hold on ♪ Keep your eyes on the prize ♪ Hold on. People like myself-- I was born on this river. I love the land. It's the delta. And to me, it's now a challenge, it's history; it's everything of what black people is all about. We came up out of slavery and this is where we acted it out, I suppose-- all of the work, all the hard work, and all that. But we put in our blood, sweat and tears and we love the land. This is Mississippi. MAN: I've lived in this delta all my life. My parents before me, and my grandparents. I've hunted and fished this land since I was a child. This land is composed of two different cultures, a white culture and a colored culture, and I've lived close to them all my life. But I'm told now that we've mistreated them and that we must change and these changes are coming faster than I expected. And I am required to make decisions on a basis of a new way of thinking and it's difficult. It's difficult for me. It's difficult for all Southerners. I was born in Mississippi, in the United States, and I am the product of my heredity and education and the society in which I was raised. And I have a vested interest in that society and I, along with a million other white Mississippians, will do everything in our power to protect that vested interest. It's just as simple as that. NARRATOR: In 1954, the Citizens' Council was established in the Delta, the northwest section of the state, where blacks outnumbered whites. The council's purpose: to preserve white political power by opposing integration. Council chapters soon spread across the state. Within four years, the Citizens' Council was powerful enough that in the election of 1959, it threw its support openly and actively behind the candidacy of a damage suit lawyer named Ross Barnett, not one of the world's most successful politicians up to then, and saw him elected over a supposed moderate who was himself a segregationist, but with a quieter voice than Ross Barnett. And from 1959 until 1963, in the Barnett administration, the Citizens' Council was the state and the state effectively, on matters racial, was the Citizens' Council. NARRATOR: Bankers, politicians and owners of businesses joined the Citizens' Councils throughout the South. They punished people who supported integration or black voting rights by foreclosing mortgages, firing workers or refusing loans to farmers. And they used their influence to push through laws that would ensure continued white domination. It's primarily a struggle for power. And I think we would be stupid indeed if we failed to see where the consequences of a supine surrender on our part would lead. NARRATOR: At the center of Mississippi's struggle for power was the black vote. In some counties, blacks outnumbered whites four to one. In 1962, in many counties, no blacks were registered. There's a big psychological gap to overcome. There's what a lot of people call a "psychology of fear" on the part of most of the Negroes. They're afraid of losing their jobs. They've been brainwashed. They think that somehow all of this is the business of the white man and that it's not something that they're supposed to be doing. NARRATOR: 26-year-old Bob Moses came to Mississippi at the request of Amzie Moore, an N.A.A.C.P. leader. Moses and other S.N.C.C. organizers opened offices throughout the state to recruit local Mississippians. I was asked would I join the S.N.C.C., which was Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, and I said, "yes." Well, what do I have to do?" They said, "Just try to encourage people to go and try to register, go over to the courthouse." And that was my start of going round here to my neighbors and friends and asking them, you know, would they come and go to the courthouse and try to register to vote. People were being put off the plantations; people were threatened; folks was put in jail-- just because we wanted people to try to register to vote. NARRATOR: Some attempting to register had even been murdered to stop black political activity and the state passed new voting laws to make registration more difficult. On this side. And right here you interpret; in other words, you tell what it means. Just write your meaning, your understanding of it. Registering to vote at that time meant that you filled out a 22-question questionnaire. One of the questions was: "Interpret any of the 286 sections "of the Mississippi constitution to the satisfaction of the registrar." Now, you have to bear in mind that some of those registrars couldn't read or write. But that didn't matter. They could still determine who should be registered if that person happened to be black, because all whites who attempted to register were registered. NARRATOR: As the struggle for voting rights escalated in the Delta, tension was building in Jackson, the state capital and the last stop of the freedom rides in 1961. A leader in Jackson and throughout the state was Medgar Evers, N.A.A.C.P. state field secretary. Evers had supported James Meredith during the battle to integrate the University of Mississippi. For ten years, he had traveled the state, fighting for racial justice, and now helped organize the N.A.A.C.P. boycott of downtown stores. Don't shop for anything on Capitol Street. Let's let the merchants down on Capitol Street feel the economic pinch. Let me say this to you: I had one merchant call me and he said, "I want you to know "that I talked to my national office today "and they want me to tell you that we don't need nigger business." These are stores that help to support the white Citizens' Council, the council that is dedicated to keeping you and I second-class citizens. Now, finally, ladies and gentlemen, we'll be demonstrating here until freedom comes to Negroes here in Jackson, Mississippi. NARRATOR: In June 1963, students in Jackson poured out of their schools to protest the beatings and arrest of demonstrators in downtown sit-ins. In response, Jackson officials put police and firemen on 24-hour alert, with orders to contain the demonstrators. Halt. Halt! Did you hear me? (people shouting) ♪ We shall not, we shall not be moved ♪ ♪ We shall not, we shall not be moved... ♪ NARRATOR: Hundreds were arrested. Mayor Alan Thompson announced that Jackson could handle 10,000 if necessary. The attitude of Jackson city officials was another reminder that blacks in Mississippi would have no real power until they had the power to elect those who governed them. (chanting): Freedom! Freedom! Freedom!... If you are not a registered voter, remember this one thing; that Alan Thompson got in the mayor's office by the majority of the vote of the folk who were qualified to vote and voted on the day that he was elected. Ross Barnett got in office because he was elected by the majority of the folk who were qualified to vote and voted on the day that he was elected, and if you don't like this thing, let's get ready to change it! (cheering and applause) NARRATOR: Demonstrators were not backing down and many were being injured. For Medgar Evers, the situation grew more dangerous with every passing day. It was simply in the air. You knew that something was going to happen and the logical person for it to happen to was Medgar. It certainly brought us closer during that time. As a matter of fact, we didn't talk; we didn't have to. We communicated without words. It was a touch, it was a look, it was holding each other, it was music playing. And I used to try to reassure him and tell him, "Nothing's going to happen to you. The F.B.I. is here"-- laugh-- um, "Everybody knows you, you're in the press. They wouldn't dare do anything to you." NARRATOR: On June 11, 1963, Myrlie Evers watched at home as President John Kennedy made his strongest speech on civil rights. It is not enough to pin the blame on others, to say this is a problem of one section of the country or another, or deplore the facts that we face. A great change is at hand and our task, our obligation is to make that revolution, that change peaceful and constructive for all. Those who do nothing are inviting shame, as well as violence. Those who act boldly are recognizing right as well as reality. Late that night, he came home. The children were still up, I was asleep across the bed and we heard the motor of the car coming in and pulling into the driveway. We heard him get out of the car and the car door slam, and in that same instance, we heard the loud gunfire. The children fell to the floor, as he had taught them to do. I made a run for the front door, turned on the light and there he was. The force of the bullet had pushed him forward, as I understand, and the strong man that he was, he had his keys in his hand and had pulled his body around the rest of the way to the door. Um... there he lay. And I screamed, and people came out. Our next-door neighbor fired a gun, as he said, to try to frighten anyone away. And I knew then that... that was it. (siren wailing) NARRATOR: Medgar Evers had been shot in the back by a single round from a high-powered rifle. The one fingerprint found on the weapon belonged to Byron de la Beckwith, a member of the Citizens' Council in Greenwood, Mississippi. Medgar Evers, 37 years old, died one hour later. When Medgar was felled by that shot and I rushed out and saw him lying there and people from the neighborhood began to gather, there were also some whose color happened to have been white. I don't think I have ever hated as much in my life as I did at that particular moment with anyone who had white skin. I screamed at the neighbors and when the police finally got there, I told them that they had killed Medgar. And I can recall wanting so much to have a... machine gun or something in my hands and just stand there and mow them all down. I was just... I can't explain the depth of my hatred at that point. We view this as a cold, brutal, deliberate killing in a savage, uncivilized state-- the most savage, the most uncivilized state in the entire 50 states. There is no state with a record that approaches that of Mississippi in inhumanity, murder, brutality and racial hatred. It is absolutely at the bottom of the list. MAN: ♪ In Jackson, Mississippi, in 1963 ♪ ♪ There lived a man who was brave ♪ ♪ He fought for freedom ♪ All of his life ♪ But they laid Medgar Evers ♪ In his grave. On the day that Medgar was... funeral, I mean, there was violence. There was no way to predict it. There was a different element of people who had never participated in the movement before-- the guys off the street, who were just angry, you know, who at that time is... we had very little contact with in the Jackson area. We had mostly worked through churches, we had worked through students, young people, and then just people in general, you know. But the street people we had not really worked with, because they didn't want to have anything to do with us because they always felt that they could not cope with the nonviolence. Not that they disagreed with the movement, just the tactics that we used. And on that particular day, that group of people decided to speak out. (people shouting) The police department and others came there. They actually antagonized the people. They were there in full battalion gear with the riot armor on and guns, and they were being pretty rough with the people on the street. And the people just said, "We're not going to take that. "This is the funeral of our leader. "And here they are, harassing us and the white folk killed him." NARRATOR: Shots had already been fired when John Doar, a Justice Department attorney, stepped between the crowds and the police. With the help of Dave Dennis and others, Doar convinced both sides to back off. The demonstrators went home. Medgar Evers was buried in Arlington Cemetery with full military honors. No one was ever convicted of his murder. The assassination of Medgar Evers focused national attention on a state which seemed at war with half of its own citizens. As anger grew, so did a concern that Mississippi could never be made to change from within. Civil rights leaders and sympathetic whites traveled to the South to see firsthand the state called "the closed society." Any doubts we had about the desirability of coming down before we came have been removed by what we've seen since we've been here. What we've discovered is that the people who run Mississippi today can only do so by force. They cannot allow a free election in Mississippi because if they did, they wouldn't run Mississippi. And as we go around Mississippi and are arrested and beaten and charged with miscellaneous and very imaginative traffic violations that don't occur and threatened and told to leave, we understand why the people asked us to come down here, because inside Mississippi, the rule of force is so hard on them that they can't shake the yoke. But when we leave Mississippi, we'll tell what we have found. And the people of the United States aren't going to allow this to go on forever. NARRATOR: Movement leaders debated how to keep national attention on Mississippi. In June 1964, Bob Moses announced "Freedom Summer." We hope to send into Mississippi this summer upwards of 1,000 teachers, ministers, lawyers and students from all around the country who will engage in what we are calling "freedom schools," community center programs, voter registration activity, research work, work in the white communities and, in general, a program designed to open up Mississippi to the country. NARRATOR: Opening up Mississippi would not be easy. Local newspapers warned of a coming invasion. Governor Paul Johnson called for more highway patrolmen. The city of Jackson ordered an armored truck for riot control-- all to resist college students from across the country who had volunteered to work in the state during the summer. Most of the students that people were bringing in for the summer project were from the large universities and they were from families who were politicians, bankers, lawyers and others. And we felt by the fact that bringing in those particular people that the attention of their parents and relatives from the various different other parts of the country would be on these areas. And by having large numbers of whites in here is the press, the American public would have much more concern than if there were just a bunch of blacks that were in the state. NARRATOR: The first Freedom Summer volunteers gathered for training in Oxford, Ohio. BOB DYLAN: ♪ ...is blowin' in the wind ♪ The answer is blowin' in the wind. ♪ We're going down there. We're trying to face a real situation that will occur-- namely, there'll be a mob at the courthouse. And we want to get used to this, used to people jeering at us. We also want the white students who are playing the mob to get used to saying things, calling out epithets-- calling people "niggers" and "nigger lovers." (students all shouting) FORMAN: Okay, that was very good. (laughter) See, what happened... Okay. That was very good because you all got carried away, see? I mean, you were just supposed to yell and you started hitting us so you got off your frustrations, you know. But that's what happens, you know. MAN: Isn't that really the way it begins? Yeah, that's what happens, you know. People begin shouting, then somebody lurches forward and then everybody begins to lurch forward. So that was even better than we had anticipated. NARRATOR: The students were warned of violence and of the possibility of death once they crossed the Mississippi state line. MAN: People should expect to get beaten... NARRATOR: The first wave of recruits, including 20-year-old Andrew Goodman from New York City, left Saturday, June 20, for Mississippi. Goodman rode with veteran civil rights workers James Chaney, age 21, and Michael Schwerner, age 24. Sunday, June 21. On Andy Goodman's first day in Mississippi, the three men drove to investigate the burning of a black Methodist church. The church had been the scene of a civil rights meeting just weeks before. Around 3:00 that afternoon, their 1963 blue Ford station wagon was stopped by Deputy Sheriff Cecil Price outside the town of Philadelphia. The three young men were released by Deputy Price around 10:30 that night. It was then that they disappeared. In Oxford, Ohio, volunteers were waiting to travel south. We had to tell the students what we thought was going on because if, in fact, anyone is arrested and then taken out of the jail, then the chances that they are alive is just almost zero. And we had to confront the students with that before they went down, because they now had... the ball game was changed. GROUP: ♪ Deep in my heart ♪ I know that I do believe ♪ Oh, we shall overcome... NARRATOR: Within days, the disappearance was national news. A massive search was ordered by President Lyndon Johnson. 200 sailors from the Naval Air Station in Meridian moved into the Philadelphia area and were joined there by F.B.I. agents. NEWSCASTER: In Meridian, the wife of missing Mickey Schwerner, Rita Schwerner, flew from Oxford, where she'd been training many of the summer volunteers. She was greeted by James Farmer, head of CORE, the Congress of Racial Equality. It's tragic, as far as I am concerned, that white Northerners have to be caught up in the machinery of injustice and indifference in the South before the American people register concern. I personally suspect that if Mr. Chaney, who is a native Mississippian Negro, had been alone at the time of the disappearance, that this case, like so many others that have come before, would have gone completely unnoticed. Their disappearance, although it might have been calculated to try and drive people away from the state, had just the opposite effect on me and everyone else. Whenever an incident like this happens-- and they happen fairly often, although usually not this serious-- everyone reacts the same way. They become more and more determined to stay in the state and fight the evil system that people have to live under here. I am down here because I believe that my freedom is very much entangled with the freedom of every other man and that if another man is not free, then I'm not free. So I'm fighting for my own freedom here. MAN: Are you scared? Yes, I'm very much afraid. Everyone here is. But we knew before we came down something about what it's going to be like and I don't know of anybody that's turning back because of things like this that happen. We most certainly do not and will not give protection to civil rights workers. In the first place, the F.B.I. is not a police organization. It's purely an investigative organization. And the protection of individual citizens, either natives of the state or coming into the state, is a matter for the local authorities. The F.B.I. will not participate in any such protection. NARRATOR: By early July, the volunteers had arrived in full force. During the summer, 80 civil rights workers were beaten and 1,000 arrests were reported. One of the most dangerous jobs was traveling from house to house in isolated rural areas to build support for a new political party. We have organized into the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party. We are holding a freedom registration drive throughout the state, encouraging every Negro and white who wants a stake in his political future to prove it by getting his name on a freedom registration book. We have scheduled precinct meetings and district caucuses, and on August 6, here in Jackson, we will hold our state convention. At that time we will elect a slate of delegates to the national convention in Atlantic city. And when that convention meets, we will present ourselves for seating as the only democratically constituted body of Mississippi citizens worthy of taking part in that convention's business. NARRATOR: Volunteers collecting signatures for the party found themselves openly challenging the way life had been lived in Mississippi for three quarters of a century. MAN: People would be sitting down and you would say hello and you'd shake their hands. Now, that was an unusual thing for a white person to do to a black person in Mississippi at that time. Frequently people would respond by not looking us in the eye. At the end of every phrase, there would be a "ma'am" or a "sir," depending on who was there, and they would say yes to everything we said. We'd say, "Would you like to be involved "in the voter registration project? Will you go down to vote?" "Yes, sir." And we knew we were not getting across. We knew they were just waiting for us to go away because we were a danger to them-- and in many ways we were. We had much less to risk than they did. This was their lives, their land, their family and they were going to be here when we were gone. NARRATOR: Despite the fear, 60,000 signed up as members of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party. This mass political awakening reminded segregationists of the years following the Civil War, a time when blacks had been elected to high political office. We have had experience in the past with Negro political domination. It was known as the Reconstruction. There are some who call this present attempt to build up political power through the mass registration of unqualified Negro voters the second reconstruction. I don't want the Negro as I have known him and contacted him during my lifetime as a class... to control the making of a law that controls me; to control the government under which I live. INTERVIEWER: Would you feel better, then, if there were some legal means of keeping all Negroes off the rolls? I'd feel better and I think this country would be better off if all Negroes were removed from it because I think it is a potential source of racial strife. NARRATOR: While the search for the missing civil rights workers continued, President Lyndon Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The new law increased the federal government's power to ban discrimination in public places, but did little to give Southern blacks the vote. In Mississippi, the civil rights groups pushed forward with the drive to sign up members for the new Freedom Democratic Party. Summer volunteers also supplied legal and medical services and set up a system of community centers and alternative schools, all part of Freedom Summer. (children singing) (music playing in background) NARRATOR: For years, most blacks in Mississippi had been denied the right to a decent education. S.N.C.C. opened 41 freedom schools across the state. By day, the volunteers taught everything from the 3 "R's" to innovative courses in black history. By night, the schools were used for political meetings to explain the new party and to sign up new members. These activities and the presence of white volunteers teaching in black schools and living in black homes offended many white Mississippians. When the civil rights workers invaded the state in the summer of 1964 to change us, presumably into their own image, they were met with a feeling of some curiosity but mostly resentment. They fanned out across the state, made a great to-do of breaking up our customs, of flaunting social practices that had been respected by people here over the years. That was the time of the hippies just coming in. Many had on hippie uniforms and conducted themselves in hippie ways. They were not exactly the types of models that most people that I knew wanted to emulate. Also, the arrogance that they showed in wanting to reform a whole state in the way they thought it should be created resentment. (dog barking) NARRATOR: By late July, the three young men had been missing for six weeks. Many lost hope that they were still alive, but the goals for Freedom Summer were unchanged. Volunteers wanted to prove that black and white could live and work together. I remember cooking some pinto beans and that's all we had. And everybody just got around the pot, you know, and that was an experience-- you know, just to see white people coming around the pot and getting a bowl and putting some stuff in and then sitting around talking, and sitting on the floor, sitting anywhere-- because there wasn't any great dining room tables and stuff that we had been used to working in the white people's houses, and go in there and find them all sitting, you know, and everybody sitting and they'd ring a bell or something and tap, and you'd come in and bring the stuff and put it around. But this... you were sitting on the floor, and they was talking and, you know, we were sitting there laughing and... I guess they became very real and very human-- we each to one another. NARRATOR: On August 4, on a farm outside the town of Philadelphia, the bodies of Goodman, Chaney and Schwerner were discovered buried together in an earthen dam. The autopsy reports indicated that the men had been killed by .38-caliber bullets. A later report revealed that James Chaney, the one black victim, had also suffered severe bone and skull fractures. Throughout our history, countless Americans have died in the continuing struggle for equality. We shall continue to work for this goal and we fervently hope that Americans so engaged will be aided and protected in this noble mission. For ourselves, we wish to express our pride in our son's commitment and that of his companions now dead and that of his companions now alive, now in Mississippi, acting each hour to express those truths that are self-evident. NARRATOR: August 7, 1964-- the funeral of James Chaney in Meridian, Mississippi. CHOIR: ♪ Then the Mississippi River... ♪ ♪ Then the Mississippi River... ♪ ♪ Well, you can count them a-one by one ♪ ♪ It could be your son ♪ Count them a-two by two ♪ It could be me or you ♪ Count them a-three by three ♪ Do you want to see? ♪ Count them a-four by four... I feel that he's got his freedom and we are still fighting for it. But what I want to talk about right now, it's the living death that we have right among our midst not only in the state of Mississippi, but throughout the nation-- those are the people who don't care, those who do care but don't have the guts enough to stand up for it, and those people who are busy up in Washington and other places using my freedom and my life to play politics with. That includes the president on down to the governor of the state of Mississippi. In my opinion, as I stand here, I not only blame the people who pulled the trigger or did the beating or dug the hole with the shovel, or buried... not buried, sorry. But I blame the people in Washington, D.C., and on down in the state of Mississippi for what happened just as much as I blame those who pulled the trigger. You see, I know what's going to happen! I feel it deep in my heart. When they find the people who killed those guys in Neshoba County, you got to come back to the state of Mississippi and have a jury-- all their cousins, their aunts, their uncles-- and I know what they're going to say-- "not guilty." 'Cause no one saw them pull the trigger. I'm tired of that! See, and another thing that makes me even tireder, though, that is the fact that we as people here in the state and the country are allowing this to continue to happen-- even us as black folk. As I look at the young kids here, that's something else that I grieve about. Little Ben Chaney here, and the other ones like him around in this audience. When he wants someone to baby-sit for him, he gets my black mammy to hold that baby! See, as long as he can do that, he can sit down beside me, he can watch me go up there and register to vote, and he can watch me take some type of public office in the state and he can sit down as I rule over him just as he's ruled over me for years, you see. This is our country, too. We didn't ask to come here when they brought us over here. I had been approached by the people of my national office of CORE and others to make sure that the speech that's given is calm. They don't want a lot of, you know, of things stirred up and everything else like that. And I'd agreed to do that, and I said okay, fine, that's good. But then when I got up there and I looked out there and I saw little Ben Chaney, things just sort of snapped and I was in a fantasy world to be sitting up here talking about things going to get better and we should do it in an easy manner and with nonviolence and stuff like that. Because this country, you cannot make a man change by speaking a foreign language. He has to understand what you're talking about. This country operates, operated then and still operates, on violence. I mean, "Eye for an eye, tooth for a tooth." That's what we respect. NARRATOR: The parents of Chaney and Schwerner wanted their sons buried side by side in Meridian. But Mississippi law enforced segregation even in death. James Chaney, age 21, was buried alone in a segregated cemetery. PREACHER: ...sorrow and sadness, that we are all one family... NARRATOR: The state never brought anyone to trial for the murder of the three young men, but in federal court, Deputy Cecil Price and six others were found guilty of civil rights violations in connection with the killings and received sentences ranging from three to ten years. As Freedom Summer moved towards August, the state's Democratic Party met to select delegates to the national convention. As usual, blacks were not allowed to participate, but this would be no ordinary election year. Two weeks later, the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party chose its own delegates to challenge the right of the all-white regulars to represent the state. The M.F.D.P. emphasized that it was open to all citizens. The Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party is only beginning, and it is beginning on the basis that it believes that a political party should be open to all the people who wish to subscribe to its principles. That means... (applause) It's open to even the son of the planter on whose plantation you work if that son has reached the point that he is willing to subscribe to your principles. NARRATOR: The M.F.D.P. delegation of 64 blacks and four whites prepared to leave for Atlantic city. Their goal was to be seated at the Democratic National Convention as the true representatives of their home state. For many, it was their first trip out of Mississippi. For all, this was the culmination of Freedom Summer, the final opportunity to open up Mississippi to the nation. You know, I think one of the things that made the delegation of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party so hopeful, you know, so expectant was the fact that people had made a discovery that there is a way out of much that is wrong with our lives and that there is a way to change it and that is through the execution of this vote, you know. And so we can't get past these people at the state level because they've locked us out, but we just know that once we get to the national level, with all the proof that we have been locked out and the fact that we've had the courage to go ahead and create our own party, then we feel like we are going to get that representation that we've been denied for so long. NARRATOR: Atlantic City, New Jersey, site of the 1964 Democratic Convention. Lyndon Johnson expected no opposition in getting his party's nomination, but was concerned the M.F.D.P. would disrupt party unity. With the arrival of the Freedom Democrats on August 20, there were now two delegations in town from Mississippi. The Democratic Party would have to decide which would represent the state on the convention floor. That decision would be made by the Credentials Committee. On Saturday, August 22, America watched this nationally televised hearing. It is the very terror that these people are living through that is the reason that Negroes aren't voting, that they're kept out of the Democratic Party by the terror of the regular party, and what I want the credentials committee to hear is the terror which the regular party uses on the people of Mississippi, which is what Reverend King was explaining, which is what Aaron Henry was explaining and which is what the next witness will explain-- Mrs. Fannie Lou Hamer. Mr. Chairman, and to the Credentials Committee, my name is Mrs. Fannie Lou Hamer and I live at 626 East Lafayette Street, Ruleville, Mississippi, Sunflower County, the home of Senator James O. Eastland and Senator Stennis. If the Freedom Democratic Party is not seated now, I question America. Is this America? The land of the free and the home of the brave? Where we have to sleep with our telephones off of the hook because our lives be threatened daily because we want to live as decent human beings in America? We will return to this scene in Atlantic City, but now we switch to the White House and NBC's Robert Goralski. NARRATOR: Lyndon Johnson cut off coverage of M.F.D.P. testimony by making a last-minute request for network air time. We had an hour before the Credentials Committee. Fannie Lou Hamer made her famous pitch, Martin Luther King... We had the greatest array of people you have ever... can imagine, and the Credentials Committee was very impressed. But Johnson was not. NARRATOR: Despite the TV cut-off by the president, Mrs. Hamer's message had gotten through. Viewers back home sent telegrams to delegates urging support of the M.F.D.P. But President Johnson was afraid Southerners would desert the party if the M.F.D.P. were seated. He began pressuring liberals close to the Freedom Democrats. Senator Hubert Humphrey, a long-time champion of civil rights, was feeling that pressure. Many believed he would not be selected for the vice-presidency unless he helped stop the M.F.D.P. My only interest in this is an attempt to try to bring about a reconciliation of views in the hopes to keep our convention united with one objective: to defeat Mr. Goldwater in November and to carry forward the Democratic program. NARRATOR: Humphrey assigned Walter Mondale, his young protégé from Minnesota, to work out a solution. See, everybody was trying to think of something that was simple that would solve it and would satisfy everybody. The problem was, there was no such solution. And so we'd go around and around and around, and everybody'd try this and try that. And writers would see if they could write around the problems, and philosophers would see if they could dream of something to dream over the problem. It never... it wouldn't go away. It had to be resolved. It had to be compromised, I think, in the way that we did it and it was inevitable that some people would be unhappy. NARRATOR: The committee did come up with a compromise. It offered the M.F.D.P. two seats at large, meaning they would not represent the state of Mississippi. It allowed the all-white regulars to be seated only if they would swear loyalty to the Democratic ticket. Finally, the committee promised to bar from future conventions any delegation guilty of discrimination. In response, all but four of the all-white regulars walked out of the convention. It may not satisfy everybody-- the extremes on the right or the extremes on the left-- but we think it is a just compromise. We think it is based soundly on the law. We think it clearly recognizes, without compromises, the basic devotion of this party to human rights, and we think it represents and sets the stage for the overwhelming victory of the man who, more than anybody else in the world, represents the cause of justice and law today-- President Lyndon Baines Johnson. NARRATOR: Lyndon Johnson announced that Hubert Humphrey would be his running mate before boarding the plane for the convention. In Atlantic City, the Freedom Democrats had not yet decided whether to accept or reject the compromise. We've got an offer to our people. We've got a great deal out of this. I think to call this a loss is a bad mistake. REPORTER: You were talking before of no compromise. Now you've got your two delegates in. The regular party's got three. Do you think you've made substantial gains? I think we've made a terrific gain. You always talk "no compromise" in a convention until you get the best you can. Then you quit. Are the leaders of the Freedom Democrats satisfied? I don't think so, and I don't blame them. Nobody ever gets all they want. The leaders of the regulars aren't satisfied either. They're going back to Jackson. ♪ Let my people go... NARRATOR: Political allies and national civil rights leaders urged the M.F.D.P. to accept the compromise, but the Freedom Democrats voted overwhelmingly to turn it down. In the words of Fannie Lou Hamer, "We didn't come all this way for no two seats when all of us is tired." ♪ Go tell it on the mountain ♪ To let my people go ♪ Who's that yonder dressed in white? ♪ ♪ Let my people go ♪ Looks like the children of the Israelites ♪ ♪ Oh, let my people go ♪ Go tell it on the mountain ♪ Over the hills and everywhere ♪ ♪ Go tell it on the mountain ♪ To let my people go. I think people felt that the Democratic Party would actually embrace them. I think there was a lack of real understanding of the depth to which the local Southern politicians were entwined in the Democratic Party and that there would be a real reluctance on the part of the national Democratic Party leadership to take in black people at the expense of these Southern politicians. The whole issue around the compromise, for us and for me, was that it was some kind of political ploy that they understood. But for us, for Mississippi, it was what was right and what was wrong. It was, um... we had been done wrong. Our rights had been taken away and you just couldn't issue some two seats at large to correct that. And it was a moral situation that had to be righted. So it wasn't just a political something to get away with that we sit in the rooms and negotiate. You know, they knew about those kind of things, but we didn't-- how to sit in rooms and negotiate a way and say, "We'll take the best of this, a piece of that." We went after what was right and it was wrong the way we had been treated for hundreds and hundreds of years-- denied the right to register to vote, denied the right to participate in the political process and that's what was going on. NARRATOR: The M.F.D.P. delegates made one last appeal for national attention. They tried to sit in the seats abandoned by the Mississippi regulars. REPORTER: Would you identify yourself for us, please? My name is Mrs. Fannie Lou Hamer. I'm the vice-chairman of the Freedom Democrat Party. Where did you get the credentials to get into the building tonight, Mrs. Hamer? Some loyal friends of ours gave us an invitation to come in. We sat with them a while and we wanted to sit in our own state. Do you have any kind of credentials that will get you into these seats? No, we don't-- only as American citizens. REPORTER: Mr. Sergeant-at-Arms: Have you had any contingency plans for this? None at all. I just stand here peacefully, trying to keep this aisle clear. That's the same as they do down in Mississippi. When they're before the eyes of the world, they're peaceful and loving, and when they get back to Mississippi, it's "Nigger, you can't come in here!" "Nigger, you can't come in there!" "Nigger, you get out!" And here we are in the eyes of the world, seeing the same thing that happens down, way down in the deep South, Mississippi. NARRATOR: The M.F.D.P. was never seated at the 1964 convention, but their protest opened up the Democratic Party and changed national politics. For some, Atlantic City ended in disillusionment. They had lost faith in America's leaders, but they had come to know their own power. The country refuses to demand that Mississippi give Negroes their rights, their privileges. We didn't ask to be elected to anything. We didn't ask to be elected to anything. We didn't ask for any patronage. All we asked for is to let us sit. ♪ ANNOUNCER: To order Eyes on the Prize season 1 on DVD, visit ShopPBS or call 1-800-PLAY-PBS. This program is also available on Amazon Prime Video. ♪