Schwerner, Chaney, and Goodman

Schwerner, Chaney, and Goodman,

American civil-rights workers in the South during the 1960s. Michael Schwerner (b. 1939) and Andrew Goodman (b. 1943), both white New Yorkers, went to Neshoba co., Mississippi, in 1964 as volunteers to aid in the registration of African-American voters as part of the Mississippi Summer Project. They and fellow volunteer James Earl Chaney (b. 1943), an African American from Mississippi, disappeared on the evening of June 21, 1964. The FBI recovered their bodies, which had been buried in an earthen dam, 44 days later. The Neshoba County deputy sheriff and 17 others, all Ku Klux KlanKu Klux Klan
, designation mainly given to two distinct secret societies that played a part in American history, although other less important groups have also used the name.
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 members, were indicted for the crime; seven were convicted in 1967 and an eighth in 2005.

Bibliography

See M. Dickoff and T. Pagano, dir., Neshoba: The Price of Freedom (documentary film, 2010).