Summary
Chapters
Video Info
The fearless activism, life and legacy of Harry T. Moore, one of the first civil rights activists of the turbulent 1940s in Florida, is documented by historians, his daughter, people who knew him, and timely quotes from his writings.
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Chapter 1: Christmas 1951—Introductory Sequences to Freedom Never Dies
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Chapter 2: Florida in the Early 20th Century—the Ku Klux Klan, Sharecropping, and Poverty
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Chapter 3: Harry T. Moore—Early Years to Young Adulthood
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Chapter 4: "Feel Something Drawing on Me"—The Roots of Harry T. Moore's Civil Rights Activism
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Chapter 5: Harry T. Moore—the NAACP and Civil Rights in Florida
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Chapter 6: "He Who Would be Free Must Strike the First Blow"—Harry T. Moore's Fearless and Determined Political Activism
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Chapter 7: "Southern Trees Bear a Strange Fruit"—the Lynching of Willie James Howard
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Chapter 8: Segregationist Sheriff, Willis V. McCall—Setting the Stage for Groveland, July 1949
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Chapter 9: White Supremacy, the Ku Klux Klan, and Rioting in Groveland, Florida—July 1949
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Chapter 10: Florida's Year of Terror—the Ku Klux Klan and the NAACP in the Summer of 1951
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Chapter 11: Harry T. Moore—Pushing Boundaries
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Chapter 12: Harry T. Moore—Clashes With the NAACP National Office
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Chapter 13: "No Bomb Can Kill the Dream I Hold"—The Murder of Harry T. Moore
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Chapter 14: "Freedom Never Dies"—The Forgotten Legacy of Harry T. Moore
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Chapter 15: Closing Comments and Credits—Freedom Never Dies
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