Saturday, October 22, 2011

Lowndes County Freedom Organization

From Black Past.org. An Online Reference Guide to African American History, Quintard Taylor, Scott and Dorothy Bullitt Professor of American History University of Washington, Seattle, "Lowndes County Freedom Organization"

The Lowndes County Freedom Organization (LCFO), also known as the Black Panther Party, was started in 1965 under the direction of Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) activist Stokely Carmichael. In 1965, Lowndes County in Alabama was 80% black but not a single black citizen was registered to vote. Carmichael arrived in the county to organize a voter registration project and from this came the LCFO. Party members adopted the black panther as their symbol for their independent political organization.

Jeremiah Day, Lowndes County Freedom Organization Headquarters, Alabama

More than half of the African American population in Lowndes County lived below the poverty line. Moreover, white supremacists had a long history of extreme violence towards anyone who attempted to vote or otherwise challenge all-white rule. Lowndes County Freedom Organization members didn’t simply want to vote to place other white candidates in office. Instead they wanted to be able to vote for their own candidates.

The Lowndes County Freedom Organization

White voters in Lowndes County reacted strongly to the LCFO. In many instances, whites evicted their sharecroppers, leaving many blacks homeless and unemployed. Whites also refused to serve known LCFO members in stores and restaurants. Small riots broke out with the local police often firing only on blacks during these confrontations.


However, the LCFO pushed forward and continued to organize and register voters. In 1966, several LFCO candidates ran for office in the general election but failed to win. While their attempt was unsuccessful, the LCFO continued to fight and their goal and motto of “black power” spread outside of Alabama.

The tent headquarters of the Lowndes County Freedom Organization

The movement spread all over the nation. Two black Californians, Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale, asked for permission to use the black panther emblem that the Lowndes County Freedom Organization had adopted, for their newly formed Black Panther Party. The Oakland-based Black Panther Party became a much more prominent organization than the LCFO. Thus few people remember the origins of this powerful symbol with impoverished African Americans in a central Alabama County. (source: Black Past.org)

3 comments:

  1. Hi - my name is Jeremiah Day and I've been researching the LCFO, but just want to be clear - the photos aren't by me and should instead be credited to Doug Harris.

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  2. And I really appreciate this post! The material on Du Bois is totally new to me - thanks!

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  3. And this info should be taught in all schools between 4th and 8th grades! I had never heard of this and I was a young Black Panther when I was 14 years old.

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