A group of people, black and white, men and women, in suits and dresses march under a banner reading Medical Committee for Civil Rights

MCCR was There

By Elizabeth A. Mullen ~

A group of people, black and white, men and women, in suits and dresses march under a banner reading Medical Committee for Civil Rights
Medical Committee for Civil Rights at the March on Washington, 1963
National Library of Medicine #101455945

As crowds gather today on the Mall in Washington, DC—on the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom—we remember that participants in the March came from all parts of society.  In this photograph a contingent of medical workers, doctors, nurses, and others march under the banner of the Medical Committee for Civil Rights (MCCR).  The MCCR was a short-lived organization, initially formed by physician Walter Lear to protest the AMA’s policy of non-integration at its annual convention in Atlantic City in 1963.  Following that protest, Dr. Lear brought together over 200 health care workers to join the March on Washington.  While the MCCR disbanded shortly afterwards, it gave rise to the Medical Committee for Human Rights, which formed in 1964 to support volunteer medical workers providing care to civil rights workers, activists, and volunteers working on the Mississippi Summer Project, known as Freedom Summer, a volunteer project organized by  the Council of Federated Organizations (COFO), a coalition of the Mississippi branches of the four major civil rights organizations (SNCC, CORE, NAACP and SCLC) to register African American voters in Mississippi.

The March of 1963 touched hundreds of thousands of lives that day in Washington, DC, transforming a generation. Today we recall the March, the generation that experienced it directly, and the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I have a Dream” speech, in which he described the event as “the greatest demonstration for freedom in the history of our nation.”

Photo of Elizabeth Mullen outside in front of a building.Elizabeth A. Mullen is Manager of Web Development and Social Media in the History of Medicine Division at the National Library of Medicine

4 comments

  1. It’s great to see this recognition of Walter Lear’s valuable initiative and the service of health professionals in the civil rights movement. But an important correction is needed. This calls Mississippi Freedom Summer a “federal project.” As is widely known, it was a project of the civil rights movement – SNCC, CORE, the SCLC and the NAACP.

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