• 54°

John Meredith speaks at Bob Jones about his father’s civil rights legacy

John Meredith spoke to Bob Jones freshmen about his father, James Meredith. (PHOTO / KENNEDY BOOKER)
John Meredith spoke to Bob Jones freshmen about his father, James Meredith. (PHOTO / KENNEDY BOOKER)

MADISON – John Meredith, son of civil rights icon James Meredith, recently spoke to approximately 400 freshmen at Bob Jones High School.

John Meredith’s visit connected the freshmen’s required reading of Harper Lee’s “To Kill a Mockingbird” to the 1960s’ Civil Rights movement.

In 1962, James Meredith’s enrollment at the University of Mississippi resulted in U.S. Attorney General Robert Kennedy ordering a military escort. Meredith graduated from Ole Miss in 1963 and then earned a juris doctorate degree at Columbia University.

A life-size statue of James Meredith now stands between the Lyceum and library at Ole Miss.

English teacher Charlotte Jackson invited Meredith after meeting him at Kroger in Madison. “He was wearing an Ole Miss cap, and I stated that I liked his hat. Later, he came to me and asked if I was from Mississippi,” Jackson said.

Jackson and Meredith realized they both are Ole Miss graduates. Meredith gave Jackson his business card. “I noticed he was an advocate and lobbyist,” Jackson said.

For the freshmen, Meredith spoke about life for black Americans in the early 1960s and his father’s difficulty in integrating Ole Miss. His slides showed burned-out buses, freedom walks and his father after being shot while attempting to walk from Memphis, Tenn. to Jackson, Miss.

“His father instilled in him an appreciation for the value of education … and the perspective of forgiveness,” Jackson said.

Surprisingly, Meredith did not discuss racism in America today. Tying in “To Kill a Mockingbird,” Meredith discussed Lee’s motivation to write the book and her growing up in a time when “she saw injustice towards blacks,” Jackson said.

“I personally thought John did an excellent job. He achieved what all teachers try to achieve: he moved the students forward in their understanding (of the Civil Rights movement) and held their attention the entire time,” Jackson said.

James Clemens High School

Students Neyan Sezhian, Erik Wu originate James Clemens Math Tournament

Bob Jones High School

Bob Jones bests rival James Clemens in Game 1 of weekend series

Digital Version

Digital version of The Madison Record – April 17, 2024

Events

Check out the 2024-25 edition of “Explore Huntsville-Madison”

Bob Jones High School

Business, Army groups offer scholarships

Bob Jones High School

Optimists award teacher grants, essay winners

Liberty Middle School

Kristen Brown named finalist for Alabama Teacher of the Year

Madison

Journey Math Team makes mark in 2 tourneys

Bob Jones High School

Artwork by Charity Stratton on exhibit at library

Harvest

Madison City Community Orchestra to present ‘Eroica’ on April 20-21

Events

Orion Amphitheater kicks off its third concert season tonight

James Clemens High School

James Clemens HOSA overshadows conference competitors

Harvest

It’s Spring! Plant sale returns to Huntsville Botanical Garden

Bob Jones High School

Bob Jones AFJROTC aces first try at obstacle course

Discovery Middle School

Clifton, Francois earn grants to enhance study of German

Bob Jones High School

Fantasy Playhouse summer camps to open in Madison

Discovery Middle School

Hogan Family YMCA to celebrate Healthy Kids Day

Bob Jones High School

Students in grades 3-5 to compete in Bob Jones Science Challenge

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

James Clemens Football Hosting Annual Mattress Sale

James Clemens High School

James Clemens baseball hot at the right time

Discovery Middle School

Register for Summer Spotlight Theatre Camp at James Clemens

Bob Jones High School

Bob Jones hails as section’s top team at Scholastic Chess Championship

James Clemens High School

James Clemens leads at Student Council Association conference

News

Messiah Lutheran’s Rummage Sale turns ‘discards into disaster relief’

x