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Marie Foster

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Marie Foster
Born
Marie Priscilla Martin

(1917-10-24)October 24, 1917
DiedSeptember 6, 2003(2003-09-06)(aged 85)
Selma,Alabama, United States
Occupation(s)Activist
Dental assistant
Known forBeing "the mother of the voting rights movement"

Marie Priscilla Martin Foster(October 24, 1917 – September 6, 2003) was a leader in theCivil Rights Movementin the U.S. during the 1960s. Her successful voter registration in Dallas County, Alabama fueled her to become an activist, and she began teaching adult classes to help people pass the requiredliteracy tests.She was the Alabama foot soldier that convincedMartin Luther King Jr.to come toSelma, Alabamaand helped organize theSelma to Montgomery marchesin 1965. Her dedication gave her the moniker "The Mother of the Voting Rights Movement," which was shortened toMother Foster.[1]

Early life and work

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Marie Foster was born Maria Priscilla Martin on October 24, 1917 near Alberta, Alabama in theBlack Belt.Like the rest of the South,Wilcox County, Alabamawas segregated, and educational opportunities were limited for Black students. Going against her husband's wishes, Foster's mother moved her and her siblings to Selma to ensure her children got the best education they could.[2]

Though her siblings graduated, Foster dropped out after she met a man and got married. She had three children, whom she raised alone after her husband's death. Determined to finish her education and provide the best she could for her children, she went back to school, graduating a year after her daughter, Rose.

Foster then enrolled in a local junior college to become a dental hygienist. After completing her training, she worked for her brother, Dr. Sullivan Jackson in a local practice in Selma.[citation needed]Her dedication to education proved to be important as she fought against the Jim Crow system that denied Black voters from registering throughout the South.

Civil rights movement

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Early years of voter registration activism

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Black voters in the South were subjected to unfair and racist practices by white registrars. Literacy tests andpoll taxesprevented most voters at the offices because of the lack of equal pay and education. In some cases, those that attempted to register had their addresses published in the newspaper, which put them at risk of retaliation by whites, including violent attacks and termination of jobs.

Because Marie Foster worked for her brother, who owned his own dental practice, she did not face the high threat level this retaliation like many others would. She was not immune to it or ignored for her work, but her economic independence meant she could work for her right to vote. In 1961 inDallas County, Alabama,roughly 156 Black people were registered to vote out of 15,000, and only 12 were new registrants since 1954.[citation needed]

Foster failed the voter registration test eight times before she finally passed and was granted her right to vote. From then on, she dedicated her life to the Civil Rights Movement: "I decided to become involved in the Civil Rights Movement because the race relations were so bad in Selma, I had a vision that we could do something about the bias conditions in Selma, the state, and someday the world."[citation needed]

Foster's education and experience with the literacy tests equipped her with critical skills in preparing other Black residents of the county to pass the test and register voters. She printed flyers inviting people to a literacy class, unsure of how many would come. Many residents feared the repercussions, others were unsure if the movement would be successful. Foster's first class had just one pupil - a 70 year old man who had never learned to read or write. Foster spent the time teaching him to write his name.[3]Eventually, Foster's patience and knack for teaching spread throughout the area, and more and more people joined the classes to learn from her, trusting that she could help them without making them feel lesser than because they lacked a good education.

Work as a movement foot soldier

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Foster became interested in the civil rights movement in the early 1960s because she felt "the race relations were so bad in Selma".[4]She was part of the revival of theDallas County Voters League,a group of African Americans that pushed for improvements in the system for voter registration[4][5]and belonged to its eight-member steering committee, known as the "Courageous Eight".[6]

Marches

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As the civil rights movement grew, Foster became an organizer for theDallas Countyarea. She participated in the march on March 7, 1965, that became known asBloody Sunday.As the march approached theEdmund Pettus Bridge,a combined state trooper and police force stopped the march, violently beating many of the participants. Foster was at the front of one of the lines along withAmelia Boynton,and was clubbed by a state trooper, leaving her with swollen knees.[7][8]Despite her injuries, two weeks later Foster participated in the march that eventually made it all the way toMontgomery, Alabama,successfully walking fifty miles over five days.[4][9]She was one of the two women to complete it.[8]

Martin Luther King, Jr. learned thatLyndon B. Johnsonwould sign theVoting Rights Actwhen he was at Foster's house.[9]He is said to have cried at the news while with Foster.[1][8]

Later life and legacy

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After the Voting Rights Act was passed, Foster continued to work as a dental assistant. In 1984, Foster worked onRev. Jesse Jackson's presidential campaign.[1]In her free time, she taught children how to read. She carried on campaigning, fighting for public housing of the poor in Selma, conduct of white bus drivers or asking for the statue of the Klan founder to be taken away from a public park.[9][8]She helped to found theNational Voting Rights Museum and Institute.[10][8]She fought many mayoral elections to replace the mayor of SelmaJoseph Smithermanwho was in office during theSelma to Montgomery marches.[8]

She died on September 6, 2003.[9]She is buried at Serenity Memorial Gardens inSelma,Alabama.

Foster was posthumously named an honoree by theNational Women's History Alliancein 2020.[1]

See also

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References

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  1. ^abcd"2020 Honorees".National Women's History Alliance.RetrievedJanuary 8,2020.
  2. ^"Marie Foster, Educator, and Activist born".African American Registry.RetrievedSeptember 14,2022.
  3. ^Women in the Civil Rights movement: trailblazers and torchbearers, 1941-1965.Vicki L. Crawford, Jacqueline Anne Rouse, Barbara Woods, Georgia State University. Division of Continuing Education, Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change Martin Luther King (First paperback ed.). Bloomington. 1993.ISBN0-253-20832-7.OCLC27380392.{{cite book}}:CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link)
  4. ^abcTracie Ratiner, ed. (2005).Encyclopedia of World Biography.Vol. 25 (2nd ed.). Detroit: Gale. pp. 140–142.
  5. ^"Dallas County Voters League".Civil Rights Teaching.RetrievedSeptember 8,2020.
  6. ^"The Story".The Selma-Dallas County Friends of the Selma to Montgomery National Historic Trail Association.
  7. ^"Civil Rights Movement History & Timeline (Selma & the March to Montgomery)".crmvet.org.RetrievedSeptember 5,2020.
  8. ^abcdef"Marie Foster | Encyclopedia".encyclopedia.RetrievedSeptember 5,2020.
  9. ^abcdMartin, Douglas (September 12, 2003)."Marie Foster, Early Fighter For Voting Rights, Dies at 85".The New York Times.ISSN0362-4331.RetrievedSeptember 5,2020.
  10. ^"Here are 5 facts about the Selma march you may not know".NBC News.March 6, 2017.RetrievedSeptember 5,2020.