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==National attention==
==National attention==


McFerren appealed to national newspapers to draw attention to plight of residents in Tent City.<ref>Viola McFerren. Oral history interview. Civil Rights Oral History Project. Special Collection Division, Nashville Public Library.</ref> Gulf, Texaco, and Esso refused deliver gasoline to McFerren's store. The [[National Association for the Advancement of Colored People|NAACP]] called for a national boycott of these chains.<ref name="Hamburger">{{cite book|last1=Hamburger|first1=Robert|title=Our Portion of Hell, Fayette County, TN: An Oral History of the Struggle for Civil Rights|date=1973|publisher=Links Books|location=New York, NY|isbn=0825630223}}</ref> Attorney General Robert Kennedy ordered the Justice Department to investigate civil rights violations in Fayette County.<ref name="Tent City /> The AFL-CIO published a pamphlet, <i>Tent City... "Home of the Brave"</i> calling for donations.<ref name="Tent City" /> In 1961, trucks arrived with 150 tons of donated food and clothes. <ref name="Hamburger" /> National attention drew white civil rights advocates from Cornell University, the University of Wisconsin, and the [[Quakers|Religious Society of Friends]] (Quakers).
McFerren appealed to national newspapers to draw attention to plight of residents in Tent City.<ref>Viola McFerren. Oral history interview. Civil Rights Oral History Project. Special Collection Division, Nashville Public Library.</ref> Gulf, Texaco, and Esso refused deliver gasoline to McFerren's store. The [[National Association for the Advancement of Colored People|NAACP]] called for a national boycott of these chains.<ref name="Hamburger">{{cite book|last1=Hamburger|first1=Robert|title=Our Portion of Hell, Fayette County, TN: An Oral History of the Struggle for Civil Rights|date=1973|publisher=Links Books|location=New York, NY|isbn=0825630223}}</ref> Attorney General Robert Kennedy ordered the Justice Department to investigate civil rights violations in Fayette County.<ref name="Tent City /> The AFL-CIO published a pamphlet, <i>Tent City... "Home of the Brave"</i> calling for donations.<ref name="Tent City" /> In 1961, trucks arrived with 150 tons of donated food and clothes. <ref name="Hamburger" /> National attention drew white civil rights advocates from Cornell University, the University of Wisconsin, and the [[Quakers|Religious Society of Friends]] (Quakers). The national attention intensified voter registration drives, and this eventually led to black majority voter registration, elections were still fixed in favour of whites.<ref name="Hamburger" />

- 1961 150 tons of food and clothes.

- intensfied voter registration strives, white college students from Cornell and Wisconsin, Quakers

- Majority black voter registration, but elections were still fixed


==Dissolution==
==Dissolution==

Revision as of 22:36, 22 February 2016

Tent City, Fayette County, Tennessee, was an encampment for displaced blacks who were removed from their homes and blacklisted from buying amenities as retaliation for registering to vote in the early days of the Civil Rights Movement.

Origins

In 1960, fourteen hundred blacks registered to vote in deeply segregated Fayette County. As retaliation, white landowners evicted 257 black share-croppers from their homes. Shepard Towles, a local black landowner, let the displaced farmers camp on his land. Towles stated, "These people had nowhere to go. I decided to let them come in free, let them use the water from my deep well—as long as it lasts."[1]This became known as Tent City.[2] Previously, John McFerren and Harpman Jameson founded the Fayette County Civic and Welfare League to 'promote civil and political and economic' community progress.[2] McFerren, Jameson, and J.F. Estes, a Memphis lawyer, travelled to Washington, D.C. to lobby the Justice Department to intervene on behalf of the share-croppers. The Civil Rights Act of 1957 prohibits "against intimidating, coercing or otherwise interfering with the rights of persons to vote for the President and members of Congress." The white community then retaliated further by refusing to sell groceries and other amenities to black registered voters.

National attention

McFerren appealed to national newspapers to draw attention to plight of residents in Tent City.[3] Gulf, Texaco, and Esso refused deliver gasoline to McFerren's store. The NAACP called for a national boycott of these chains.[2] Attorney General Robert Kennedy ordered the Justice Department to investigate civil rights violations in Fayette County.[1] The AFL-CIO published a pamphlet, Tent City... "Home of the Brave" calling for donations.[1] In 1961, trucks arrived with 150 tons of donated food and clothes. [2] National attention drew white civil rights advocates from Cornell University, the University of Wisconsin, and the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers). The national attention intensified voter registration drives, and this eventually led to black majority voter registration, elections were still fixed in favour of whites.[2]

Dissolution

References

  1. ^ a b c Tent City... "Home of the Brave". Washington, D.C.: Industrial Union Department, AFL-CIO. p. 12.
  2. ^ a b c d e Hamburger, Robert (1973). Our Portion of Hell, Fayette County, TN: An Oral History of the Struggle for Civil Rights. New York: Links Books. ISBN 0825630223. Cite error: The named reference "Hamburger" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  3. ^ Viola McFerren. Oral history interview. Civil Rights Oral History Project. Special Collection Division, Nashville Public Library.