“Even before many of us could register to vote, we marched,”
Lewis said in a quote published by the Tallahassee Democrat. “There’s nothing
more powerful than a march in a peaceful, nonviolent fashion.”
Following a 9:30 a.m. rally in the university’s Quadrangle,
Lewis and Lawson locked arms and led 300 marchers up to the Leon County
Courthouse to cast early ballots. They were joined in the front row by FAMU
Interim President Larry Robinson, State Rep. Alan Williams, City Commissioner
Andrew Gillum, and FAMU Student Body President Marissa West.
The rally and march were both nonpartisan events.
Lewis, 72, is the last surviving individual who spoke on the
stage of the 1963 March on Washington during which Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.
delivered his “I Have a Dream” speech. He
was among the nonviolent demonstrators who were beaten on Bloody Sunday in 1965
as they attempted to cross the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama. On that
fateful Sunday, Alabama state troopers cracked Lewis’ skull as they beat him
and many others who were marching in protest of voter disenfranchisement.