FANNIE LOU HAMER CIVIL RIGHTS MUSEUM
  • The Museum
  • Hamer's Biography
    • Fannie Lou Hamer's Speech to the DNC
    • Fanni Lou Hamer Civil Rights Actavist, "HONORED"
  • The meaning of Civil Rights
    • Civil Rights Time Line
  • The Mississippi Heritage Consortium
    • The Fannie Lou Hamer Civil Rights Museum >
      • Civil Rights Society
    • Rev. George W. Lee Museums of African American History and Heritage
    • The Mississippi Lynch and Civil Rights Memorial Project Inc.
    • Civil Rights Freedom Trail Tours
  • The Cultural, Arts and Heritage Development Center
    • The Re-enactment Society
    • The Old Story Teller
    • Mississippi Freedom Trail Marker Dedication #11
    • The Oldest Annual MLK Noon Day March
  • Our Newsletter
  • Contact Us

The Rev. George Lee Museums of African American History and Heritage

    The Reverend George Lee Museums of African American History and Heritage is a 501C3 non-profit/non-political organization located on 17150 Highway 49, Belzoni MS; whose goal is to preserve and promotes history, culture arts and heritage. To establish programs and projects that will bring a greater awareness and appreciation to African American and Mississippi history, while promoting racial harmony and a greater appreciation for cultural differences, while working with existing projects and organizations and create new projects and organizations to preserve and promote the rich culture and heritage of the Mississippi Delta. Our focus will be Blues, Gospel, Civil Rights and the Arts.

Who is Rev. George W. Lee

    Rev. Lee is considered to be the first person to die in the fight for civil rights for Blacks in America. George Lee's name is the first ones of 40 names listed on the Civil Rights Memorial in Montgomery, Alabama. Rev. George W. Lee lived and pastored a Baptist congregation in Belzoni, MS. A staunch supporter of civil rights and a local NAACP official, Rev. Lee constantly urged his congregation to register and vote. He knew that the only way to change things for the black citizens of Mississippi, a state gripped in the vise of racism, was through the ballot. When Rev. Lee tried to vote, the county sheriff, Ike Shelton, refused to accept his poll tax payment. Rev. Lee reported this to federal authorities and was subsequently allowed to vote, but had angered several of the white citizens of Belzoni in doing so.

    On the morning of May 7, 1955, while tending his small grocery store, George Lee was visited by two white men. His wife, sick in bed, overheard bits and pieces of the conversation and knew that Rev. Lee was being warned to stop registering blacks in Humphreys County to vote and to remove his own name from the voting rolls. When the men left, Mrs. Lee asked what they had wanted. Rev. Lee told her that they were just salesmen trying to sell him items for their store. Later that evening, Mrs. Lee heard the same white men's voices when they returned to the store to talk to Rev. Lee. He once again told her that they were simply salesmen.

          Shortly afterwards, Rev. Lee told his wife that he needed to close the store early and go to the dry cleaners to pick up a suit that he meant to wear the next day. Mrs. Lee later believed that Rev. Lee left home to avoid having her become a victim of his assailants. While driving down a street not far from his home, a shotgun blast ripped through the car. Rev. Lee lost control of the car and crashed onto the porch of a shotgun house, a lady who, at first, claimed that she saw the car of the assailants; she later changed her mind and said she saw nothing. Though his face was ripped off and had to be sutured together by the funeral home, the county coroner declared that George Lee's death was attributable to the car crash.

          When asked about the hundreds of shotgun pellets lodged in Rev. Lee's face and neck, he snidely replied, "Oh, they're just dental fillings!” When news circulated about shotgun pellets also being found in the tires of the car, Ike Shelton concocted a story that suggested that Rev. Lee had been having an extra-marital affair and had been killed by a romantic rival. News of Rev. Lee's assassination traveled across the country, drawing mourners from near and far. Ebony Magazine covered it, with pictures from the funeral which had to be held outside because the church was too small to accommodate the crowd.

"Father of the Voters Registration Movement"

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People mourn as Dr.T.R.M Howard talks, pasionately about his friend, Rev. George W. Lee
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Rev. George W. Lee lies in his coffin, his wound for all to see. He is one of the first Civil Rights Actavist who was murdered and left with facial disfigurement, in a open casket funeral.
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This is the shotgun house owned by Katherine Blair in which Rev. George Lee's car wrecked into.
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Another angle of Katherine Blair's Shotgun House.

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Rev. George Lee's funeral was held at Belzoni's Green Grove Baptist Church
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Roughly 2,000 people showed up to Rev. Lee's Funeral

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Rev. George W. Lee's Grave sight at Green Grove Baptist Church Cemetery in Belzoni, MS
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