Joanne Bland

Joanne Bland

Joanne Bland Joanne Bland is co-founder and director of the National Voting Rights Museum in Selma, Alabama. As a child, Bland was an active participant in the Selma voting rights marches of 1965, including Bloody Sunday and Turnaround Tuesday; she was the youngest...
Jessie Shepherd

Jessie Shepherd

Jessie Shepherd Jessie Shepherd is one of the original members of the African American Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights Choir, which was launched in 1959 by Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth to serve as the musical voice of the Movement in Birmingham and to sing at...
Jeff Drew

Jeff Drew

Jeff Drew Jefferson Drew is the son of John and Addine Drew, who hosted Dr. King multiple times at their home on Birmingham’s “dynamite hill” (so called because so many of the homes in the African American neighborhood were bombed during the Movement in the 1960s). He...
Jackie Palmore

Jackie Palmore

Jackie Palmore Jackie Palmore and her former husband Terry Palmore discuss the subtle and not-so-subtle racial bias they experienced as a mixed-race couple, from their courtship and marriage through parenting their biracial child, Morgan. A nurse and palliative care...
James Hobart

James Hobart

James Hobart James Hobart is a Unitarian minister whose father, Rev. Alfred Hobart, was the first minister of the Unitarian Universalist Church of Birmingham and a leader in promoting racial justice in the city in the 1950s and early 1960s. Under Rev. Alfred Hobart’s...