In 1961, Farmer, who was working for the
NAACP, was reelected as the national director of CORE, as the civil rights movement was gaining power. Although the United States Supreme Court in
Morgan v. Commonwealth of Virginia, 328 U.S. 373 (1946) had ruled that segregated interstate bus travel was unconstitutional, and reiterated that in
Boynton v. Virginia (1960), Southern states had continued to enforce segregation on buses within their territories. Gordon Carey proposed the idea of a second
Journey of Reconciliation and Farmer jumped at the idea. This time, the group planned to journey through the
Deep South. Farmer coined a new name for the trip: the
Freedom Ride. {{external media They planned for a mixed-race and -gender group to test segregation on interstate buses. The group would be trained extensively on nonviolent tactics in Washington, D.C., and embark on May 4, 1961: half by each of the two major carriers,
Greyhound Bus Company and
Trailways. They would ride through Virginia, the Carolinas, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, and finish in New Orleans on May 17. They also planned to challenge segregated seating in bus stations and lunch rooms. For overnight stops they planned rallies and support from the black community, and scheduled talks at local churches or colleges. On May 4, the participants began. The trip down through Virginia, the Carolinas and Georgia went smoothly enough. The states knew about the trip and facilities either took down the "Colored" and "White Only" signs, or didn't enforce the segregation laws. Before the group made it to Alabama, the most dangerous part of the Freedom Ride, Farmer had to return home because his father died. In Alabama, the other riders were severely beaten and abused at a stop, and they narrowly escaped death when their bus was firebombed. With the bus destroyed, they flew to New Orleans instead of finishing the ride.
Diane Nash and other members of the
Nashville Student Movement and
SNCC quickly recruited college students to restart the Freedom Ride where the first had left off. Farmer rejoined the group in
Montgomery, Alabama.
Doris Castle persuaded him to get on the bus at the last minute. The Riders were met with severe violence; in Birmingham the sheriff allowed local KKK members several minutes to attack the Riders. They badly injured a photographer covering events. The violent reactions and events attracted national media attention. The group's efforts sparked a summer of similar rides by other
Civil Rights leaders and thousands of ordinary citizens. In
Jackson, Mississippi, the state capital, Farmer and the other riders were immediately arrested and jailed, but law enforcement prevented violence. The riders followed a "jail no bail" philosophy to try to fill the jails with protesters and attract media attention. From county and town jails, the riders were sent to harsher conditions at
Parchman State Penitentiary. As the Freedom Rides were attacked by whites, news coverage became widespread, and included photographs, newspaper accounts, and motion pictures. The Congress of Racial Equality and segregation and civil rights became national issues. Farmer became well known as a civil-rights leader. The Freedom Rides inspired
Erin Gruwell's teaching techniques and the
Freedom Writers Foundation. The following year, 1963, civil rights groups, supplemented by hundreds of college students from the North, worked with local activists in Mississippi on voter education and registration.
James Chaney,
Andrew Goodman and
Michael Schwerner, all of whom Farmer had helped recruit for CORE, disappeared during the Mississippi Freedom Summer. A full-scale FBI investigation aided by other law enforcement, found their murdered corpses buried in an earthen dam. These events later were the basis for the 1988 feature movie,
Mississippi Burning. Years later, recalling Freedom Summer, Farmer said, "Anyone who said he wasn't afraid during the civil rights movement was either a liar or without imagination. I think we were all scared. I was scared all the time. My hand didn't shake but inside I was shaking." == Later career ==