A Simple Classroom, A Revolutionary Purpose
In the Jim Crow South, one dedicated teacher made a profound choice: to teach.
Septima Clark, a Black educator on South Carolina’s Johns Island, recognized that literacy was more than reading, it was the key to reclaiming civil rights. Instead of accepting injustice, she chose to educate, starting with individuals, one literate step at a time.
She began by teaching adult neighbors to read grocery labels, the Bible, and voter forms in the living rooms and beauty salons of her community.
She asked, “What do you want to read?”, grounding her lessons in relevance and empowerment.
This humble act laid the foundation for the Citizenship Schools, which taught thousands to register to vote across the segregated South.
Building a Movement at Highlander
After being fired in 1956 for her NAACP membership, Clark found refuge at the Highlander Folk School in Tennessee. There, she developed and led literacy workshops geared toward citizenship. She transformed illiterate adults into empowered local activists, agents of change.
Citizenship Schools: Knowledge That Voted
Clark’s Citizenship Schools grew remarkably. By 1961, the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) took over the program, training over 10,000 teachers and reaching 25,000 students. By the late 1960s, nearly 700,000 African Americans had registered to vote thanks to her efforts.
A Pillar in the Civil Rights Movement
Martin Luther King Jr. called her the “Mother of the Movement”, and she was also known as the “Queen Mother” or “Grandmother” of the Civil Rights Movement. Yet, for a long time, her work remained largely unheralded compared to male counterparts.
Educating from the Roots Up
Clark’s teaching didn’t stay in classrooms, it blossomed into a grassroots citizen empowerment program. Her alumni became leaders organizing in rural churches and homes, planting seeds that fueled the broader movement for justice and equality.
Honors and Legacy
Though she quietly defied norms, her legacy gained recognition. Among her honors: the Martin Luther King Jr. Award (1970), the Living Legacy Award (1979), and posthumous tributes, including a U.S. dollar coin featuring her likeness.
Her autobiographies, Echo In My Soul and Ready from Within (which won an American Book Award in 1987), echo her enduring impact.
Why Septima Deserves the HOPEmaker Title
At its core, Septima Clark’s work embodied the lesson of everyday heroism: help one person. Her belief was simple but profound—education empowers. It gives voice, dignity, and a path to participate in democracy. Her ripple effect continues to inspire educators and activists today.
What Ripple Will You Begin?
Septima teaches us to see needs not as obstacles, but as invitations. Start small, teach, inspire, and let change grow.
Help One Person Every Day—because hope is contagious.