In the mid-1950s, Septima Poinsette Clark (1898-1987), a former
public school teacher, developed a citizenship training program
that enabled thousands of African Americans to register to vote and
then to link the power of the ballot to concrete strategies for
individual and communal empowerment. In this vibrantly written
biography, Katherine Charron demonstrates Clark's crucial role--and
the role of many black women teachers--in making education a
cornerstone of the twentieth-century freedom struggle. Using
Clark's life as a lens, Charron sheds valuable new light on
southern black women's activism in national, state, and judicial
politics, from the Progressive Era to the civil rights movement and
beyond.