COFO Central Offices
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Markerman62
N 32° 17.850 W 090° 12.102
15S E 763502 N 3576851
Located in the median of John R. Lynch Street at Short Hickory Street in Jackson. Mississippi Freedom Trail #23
Waymark Code: WM118N7
Location: Mississippi, United States
Date Posted: 09/07/2019
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member jdwms_1950
Views: 2

Side 1
From this building, COFO (Council of Federated Organizations) coordinated efforts of SNCC, NAACP, CORE, SCLC, and other activist groups from early 1963 through early 1965. Clarksdale's Aaron Henry was COFO president. Bob Moses, program director, and David Dennis, assistant program director, supervised this office and mentored young activists, building a strong grassroots base. Despite frequent brutal attacks, key volunteers, along with SNCC and CORE field secretaries, kept the office open throughout the 1963 Freedom Vote and Freedom Summer of 1964 campaigns.

Side 2
COFO This building on the historic John Roy Lynch Street Civil Rights Corridor served as the COFO (Council of Federated Organizations) headquarters, considered the "nerve center" of the Mississippi freedom struggle. COFO was a coalition of organizations including the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), and community groups. Among the organizers were SNCC field secretary Bob Moses, state NAACP president Aaron Henry, NAACP field secretary Medgar Evers, and others. They had observed firsthand the challenges faced by activists and saw the need for civil rights solidarity. Originally an ad hoc group, COFO was formally organized in February 1962. The leadership of the new organization included President Aaron Henry, Program Director Bob Moses, Assistant Program Director David Dennis, and Secretary Carsie Hall, a Jackson attorney.
The focus was on voter registration and citizenship education. In 1963 COFO organized the Freedom Vote campaign—a statewide mock election in which 80,000 African Americans cast their votes for Aaron Henry and the Reverend Ed King, a white Mississippian and chaplain at Tougaloo College. This work expanded into the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party and its challenge to the Democratic Convention in Atlantic City, efforts resulting in an integrated delegation at the next convention and new rules ending racial and other exclusion. COFO created the 1964 Mississippi Summer Project—better known as Freedom Summer—during which nearly one thousand summer volunteers from across America convened in a broad voter registration campaign that attracted international attention to the civil rights movement. COFO also administered Freedom Schools across the state, where children and adults learned African American history, a topic neglected in their formal studies, and attended innovative classes in science, math, music, and literature.
Working with program directors Moses and Dennis were SNCC and CORE field secretaries. One such key figure was Lawrence Guyot, SNCC director and COFO project director in Hattiesburg, an important activist site in the state, and chairman of MFDP. Volunteer and advisor Allard K. Lowenstein from New York was also key in recruiting college student volunteers for the Freedom Vote and Freedom Summer through his network of contacts at Yale and Stanford universities. SNCC recruited more black and white men and women from schools throughout America, and COFO expanded Freedom Summer to include support and volunteers from national medical, religious, social service, labor and other groups.
Date Installed:: October 5, 2016

Organization that placed the object:: Mississippi Development Authority Tourism Division

Photo or photos will be uploaded.: yes

Related Website:: Not listed

Visit Instructions:
1. Please log only those locations you visit personally.
2. Feel free to give your impressions of the object and any other information or pictures pertaining to it.
Search for...
Geocaching.com Google Map
Google Maps
MapQuest
Bing Maps
Nearest Waymarks
Nearest Mississippi Historical Markers
Nearest Geocaches
Create a scavenger hunt using this waymark as the center point
Recent Visits/Logs:
Date Logged Log  
Markerman62 visited COFO Central Offices 08/27/2019 Markerman62 visited it