Selma to Montgomery March for Voting Rights
80 Bypass
Selma,
AL
36701
The first day of the originally scheduled march is also known as
Bloody Sunday because the civil rights leaders and activists who headed out of Selma, Ala. on March 7, 1965 made it only six blocks before they were met with the billy clubs and tear gas of law enforcement officials. It would be 14 days later before civil rights leaders had court ordered protection for the right to petition and march down the highway to Montgomery, Ala. It took the entire group, which eventually grew to about 250,000 people strong, five days to reach the end. The Voting Rights Act of 1965 was signed less than six months later by President Lyndon Johnson.