Robinson, Amelia Boynton, 1911-

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Robinson, Amelia Boynton, 1911-

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Robinson, Amelia Boynton, 1911-

Robinson, Amelia Boynton, 1911-

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Robinson, Amelia Boynton

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Robinson, Amelia Boynton

Boynton, Amelia Platts, 1911-....

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Boynton, Amelia Platts, 1911-....

Boynton Robinson, Amelia 1911-

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Boynton Robinson, Amelia 1911-

Robinson, Amelia Platts Boynton 1911-

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Robinson, Amelia Platts Boynton 1911-

Platts Boynton Robinson, Amelia 1911-

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1911-08-18

1911-08-18

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19110818

19110818

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Biographical History

Civil rights pioneer Amelia Boynton Robinson was born on August 18, 1911, in Savannah, Georgia. As a young lady, Robinson became very active in women's suffrage. In 1934, at the age of twenty-three, Robinson became one of the few registered African American voters. In an era where literacy tests were used to discriminate against African Americans seeking to vote, Robinson used her status as a registered voter to assist other African American applicants to become registered voters.

In 1930, while working as a home economics teacher in the rural south, Robinson became re-acquainted with Sam William Boynton, an extension agent for the county whom she had met while studying at Tuskegee Institute. They married and began to work together to bring education, a higher standard of living, and voting rights to the African American poor, most of whom worked as sharecroppers. In 1936, Robinson wrote a play entitledThrough the Years, to raise money for a community center that would be open to African Americans in a then-racially segregated Selma, Alabama.Through the Yearstells the story of Robert Smalls (one of Robinson's ancestors), through the character of Joshua Terrell, a slave, who gains his freedom and goes on to serve in the U.S. Congress.

On February 29, 1964, Robinson became the first African American woman ever to seek a seat in Congress from Alabama. She was also the first woman to run for this office in the state, winning ten percent of the vote when only five percent of the registered voters were African American. In 1965, Robinson was one of the civil rights leaders that led the famous first march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge which resulted in that day being called Bloody Sunday. Robinson was gassed and beaten; a wire photo of her left for dead on Edmund Pettus Bridge went around the world and helped to spark an outpouring of support for the Civil Rights Movement.

Robinson was introduced to the LaRouche Movement in 1983, and a year later, she became a board member and then vice-chairperson of the Schiller Institute. The Schiller Institute was founded to defend the rights of all humanity. The Schiller Institute published her bookBridges over Jordanin 1991. In 1992, Robinson co-founded the International Civil Rights Solidarity Movement, and has received worldwide recognition for her sincere service to humanity. In 1990, Robinson was awarded the Martin Luther King, Jr. Foundation Medal of Freedom; in 2003 she was awarded the National Visionary Leadership Award; and in 2005, Robinson and her deceased husband, Sam Boynton, were honored on the Fortieth Anniversary of Bloody Sunday in Selma. Robinson spent the latter part of her career touring the nation and worldwide, speaking on the behalf of the Schiller Institute to promote civil and human rights.

Amelia Boynton Robinson passed away on August 28, 2015.

From The HistoryMakers™ biography: https://www.thehistorymakers.org/biography/A2007.244

External Related CPF

https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n93083165

https://catalog.archives.gov/id/10573958

https://viaf.org/viaf/79468125

https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q4355869

https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n93083165

https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n93083165

https://www.thehistorymakers.org/biography/A2007.244

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eng

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Americans

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Civil Rights Leader

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Savannah (Ga.)

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Tuskegee (Ala.)

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Tuskegee Institute (Ala.)

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59484983