In 1964,
Sanford R. Leigh, the Director of
Mississippi Freedom Summer's Hattiesburg project, persuaded Randall to photograph the effects of the Civil Rights Movement in
Hattiesburg, Mississippi. Randall had a
Whitney Fellowship for that year, and had been looking for a project. He spent the entire summer photographing solely in Hattiesburg, among the African-American community and among the volunteers in area projects such as the
Freedom Schools,
Voter Registration, and the
Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party campaign. Only five of Randall's photographs were published in the summer of 1964. One seen worldwide was the bloodied, concussed
Rabbi Arthur Lelyveld, head of a prominent
Cleveland congregation and former
conscientious objector to
World War II. However, most of his photographs sat in a file at the
Shinnecock Reservation, on
Long Island, New York. In 1999, Randall donated 1800 negatives to the archives of
The University of Southern Mississippi in Hattiesburg. He and Bobs Tusa, the
archivist at USM, wrote
Faces of Freedom Summer, which was published by the
University of Alabama Press in 2001.
Faces is the only record of a single town in the midst of the Civil Rights revolution in America. At the time, the Hattiesburg Project was overlooked and unpublicised by the Civil Rights Movement. == Later Work ==