Resources

Volunteers and students in Freedom School library

Freedom Summer at Miami University and the Western College Alumnae Association

Miami University Libraries

Freedom Summer Traveling Exhibit

Freedom Summer Activities at Miami University

National Civil Rights Organizations and Archives

Books

Books for Children, Teens, & Young Adults

  • Freedom School, Yes! By Amy Littlesugar Illustrated by Floyd Cooper
    Ages 4 – 8 In this triumphant story based on the 1964 Mississippi Freedom School Summer Project, that celebrates the strength of a people as well as the bravery of one young girl who didn’t let being scared get in her way.
  • Celebrating the 50th Anniversary of the Freedom Summer By Deborah Wiles Illustrated by Jerome Lagarrigue
    Ages 4 – 8 Friendship defies racism for two boys in this stirring story of the “Freedom Summer” that followed the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Now in a 50th Anniversary Edition with a refreshed cover and a new introduction.
  • Glory Be By Augusta Scattergood 
    Ages 9 – 12 It’s the summer of 1964 in a small Mississippi town, and Glory, who’s about to turn twelve, wishes she could turn back the clock. Everyone is riled up about the town’s segregated pool.
  • Yankee Girl by Amy Rodman
    Ages 9 – 11 The year is 1964, and Alice Ann Moxley’s FBI–agent father has been reassigned from Chicago to Jackson, Mississippi. Alice finds herself thrust into the midst of the racial turmoil that dominates current events, especially when a black girl named Valerie Taylor joins her sixth-grade class.
  • A Dream of Freedom by Diane McWhorter
    Ages 9 – 12 Pulitzer Prize–winning author Diane McWhorter gives a photographic overview of the events that Occurred between 1954 (the year of Brown v. Board of Education) and 1968 (the year that Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated).
  • The Freedom Summer Murders We Shall Not Be Moved by Don Mitchell
    Ages 14+A look at the brutal murders of James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwerner in 1964, through to the conviction in 2005 of mastermind Edgar Ray Killen.
  • Freedom Summer: The Struggle for Civil Rights in Mississippi by Susan Goldman Rubin
    Ages 10+This riveting account of the murder of three civil rights crusaders in Mississippi offers new interviews with volunteers from that fateful summer and many never-before-seen photographs.
  • We Are All Welcome Here by Elizabeth Berg
    Ages 14+ It is the summer of 1964. In Tupelo, Mississippi—as tensions are mounting over civil-rights demonstrations occurring ever more frequently and violently-across the state—three women struggle against overwhelming odds for her own kind of freedom.

Documentaries


Banner Image: Courtesy Mark Levy Collection Freedom Summer Text & Photo Archive

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