Background With civil rights activity blocked by Judge Hare's injunction,
Frederick Douglas Reese requested the assistance of King and the SCLC. Three of SCLC's main organizers –
James Bevel,
Diane Nash, and
James Orange – had already been working on Bevel's Alabama Voting Rights Project since late 1963. King and the executive board of SCLC had not joined it. SNCC called in
Fay Bellamy and Silas Norman to be full-time organizers in Selma. Selma had both moderate and hardline segregationists in its white power structure. The newly elected mayor
Joseph Smitherman was a moderate who hoped to attract Northern business investment, and he was very conscious of the city's image. Smitherman appointed veteran lawman Wilson Baker to head the city's 30-man police force. Baker believed that the most effective method of undermining civil rights protests was to de-escalate them and deny them publicity, as Police Chief
Laurie Pritchett had done against the
Albany Movement in Georgia. He earned what was described as a grudging respect from activists. The hardline of segregation was represented by Dallas County
sheriff Jim Clark, who used violence and repression to maintain Jim Crow. He commanded a
posse of 200 deputies, some of whom were members of
Ku Klux Klan chapters or the
National States' Rights Party. Possemen were armed with electric cattle-prods. Some were mounted on horseback and carried long leather whips they used to lash people on foot. Clark and Chief Baker were known to spar over jurisdiction. Baker's police patrolled the city except for the block of the county courthouse, which Clark and his deputies controlled. Outside the city limits, Clark and his volunteer posse were in complete control in the county.
Events of January The Selma Voting Rights Campaign officially started on January 2, 1965, when King addressed a mass meeting in
Brown Chapel A.M.E. Church in defiance of the anti-meeting injunction. The date had been chosen because Sheriff Clark was out of town, and Chief Baker had stated he would not enforce the injunction. After King returned to Selma, the first big "Freedom Day" of the new campaign occurred on January 18. According to their respective strategies, Chief Baker's police were cordial toward demonstrators, but Sheriff Clark refused to let black registrants enter the county courthouse. Clark made no arrests or assaults at this time. However, in an incident that drew national attention, King was knocked down and kicked by a leader of the National States Rights Party, who was quickly arrested by Chief Baker. Baker also arrested the head of the
American Nazi Party,
George Lincoln Rockwell, who said he'd come to Selma to "run King out of town". Over the next week, blacks persisted in their attempts to register. Sheriff Clark responded by arresting organizers, including
Amelia Boynton and
Hosea Williams. Eventually, 225 registrants were arrested as well at the county courthouse. Their cases were handled by the
NAACP Legal Defense Fund. On January 20, President Johnson gave his inaugural address but did not mention voting rights. On January 25, U.S. district judge
Daniel Thomas issued rules requiring that at least 100 people must be permitted to wait at the courthouse without being arrested. After Dr. King led marchers to the courthouse that morning, Jim Clark began to arrest all registrants in excess of 100, and corral the rest.
Annie Lee Cooper, a fifty-three-year-old practical nurse who had been part of the Selma movement since 1963, struck Clark after he twisted her arm, and she knocked him to his knees. Four deputies seized Cooper, and photographers captured images of Clark beating her repeatedly with his club. The crowd was inflamed and some wanted to intervene against Clark, but King ordered them back as Cooper was taken away. Although Cooper had violated nonviolent discipline, the movement rallied around her.
James Bevel, speaking at a mass meeting, deplored her actions because "then [the press] don't talk about the registration." But when asked about the incident by
Jet magazine, Bevel said, "Not everybody who registers is nonviolent; not everybody who registers is supposed to be nonviolent." The incident between Clark and Cooper was a media sensation, putting the campaign on the front page of
The New York Times. When asked if she would do it again, Cooper told
Jet, "I try to be nonviolent, but I just can't say I wouldn't do the same thing all over again if they treat me brutish like they did this time." On the same day, students from
Tuskegee Institute, working in cooperation with SNCC, were arrested for acts of civil disobedience in solidarity with the Selma campaign. In New York and Chicago, Friends of SNCC chapters staged sit-ins at federal buildings in support of Selma blacks, and
CORE chapters in the North and West also mounted protests. Solidarity pickets began circling in front of the White House late into the night.
Fay Bellamy and Silas Norman attended a talk by Malcolm X to 3,000 students at the
Tuskegee Institute, and invited him to address a mass meeting at Brown Chapel A.M.E. Church to kick off the protests on the morning of February 4. When Malcolm X arrived, SCLC staff initially wanted to block his talk, but he assured them that he did not intend to undermine their work. Dr. King later said that he thought this was an attack on him. But Malcolm told
Coretta Scott King that he thought to aid the campaign by warning white people what "the alternative" would be if King failed in Alabama. Bellamy recalled that Malcolm told her he would begin recruiting in Alabama for his
Organization of Afro-American Unity later that month (Malcolm was assassinated two weeks later). That February 4, President
Lyndon Johnson made his first public statement in support of the Selma campaign. At midday, Judge Thomas, at the Justice Department's urging, issued an injunction that suspended Alabama's current literacy test, ordered Selma to take at least 100 applications per registration day, and guaranteed that all applications received by June 1 would be processed before July. On February 5, King bailed himself and Abernathy out of jail. On February 6, the White House announced that it would urge Congress to enact a voting rights bill during the current session and that the vice-president and Attorney General
Nicholas Katzenbach would meet with King in the following week. On February 9, King met with Attorney General Katzenbach, Vice President Hubert Humphrey, and White House aides before having a brief, seven-minute session with President Johnson. Following the Oval Office visit, King reported that Johnson planned to deliver his message "very soon". Throughout that February, King, SCLC staff, and members of Congress met for strategy sessions at the
Selma, Alabama, home of
Richie Jean Jackson. In addition to actions in Selma, marches and other protests in support of voting rights were held in neighboring
Perry,
Wilcox,
Marengo,
Greene, and
Hale counties. Attempts were made to organize in
Lowndes County, but fear of the Klan there was so intense from previous violence and murders that blacks would not support a nonviolent campaign in great number, even after Dr. King made a personal appearance on March 1. Overall more than 3,000 people were arrested in protests between January 1 and February 7, but blacks achieved fewer than 100 new registered voters. In addition, hundreds of people were injured or blacklisted by employers due to their participation in the campaign. DCLV activists became increasingly wary of SCLC's protests, preferring to wait and see if Judge Thomas' ruling of February 4 would make a long-term difference. SCLC was less concerned with Dallas County's immediate registration figures, and primarily focused on creating a public crisis that would make a voting rights bill the White House's number one priority. James Bevel and
C. T. Vivian both led dramatic nonviolent confrontations at the courthouse in the second week of February. Selma students organized themselves after the SCLC leaders were arrested. King told his staff on February 10 that "to get the bill passed, we need to make a dramatic appeal through Lowndes and other counties because the people of Selma are tired." By the end of the month, 300 blacks were registered in Selma, compared to 9500 whites. ==First Selma-to-Montgomery march==