[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 33 (Thursday, February 27, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H2005-H2006]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING REVEREND FREDERIC D. REESE DURING BLACK HISTORY MONTH 2014
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Alabama (Ms. Sewell) for 5 minutes.
Ms. SEWELL of Alabama. Mr. Speaker, in continuing my commitment to
honoring African Americans from Alabama during this Black History
Month, today I rise to honor the renowned educator, pastor, and civil
rights activist Reverend Dr. Frederick Douglas Reese on this occasion
of Black History Month 2014.
For his dedication and distinguished service to the city of Selma and
the State of Alabama, I pay tribute today to the life and work of
Reverend Dr. F.D. Reese. This beloved pastor and civil rights activist
marched across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama, in 1965,
along with hundreds of other supporters.
[[Page H2006]]
By the mid-1960s, Reese was president of the Dallas County Voters
League and was also a local teacher who presided over the Selma
Teachers Association. Discouraged by Selma's efforts to hinder voter
registration for African Americans, Reverend Reese advocated that the
teachers press to make sure that the students actually went to register
to vote.
Reese invited Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and members of
the SCLC to lead Selma's voting rights protest. King's staff helped
organize months of demonstrations in Selma, with Reverend Reese's
assistance.
Reverend Reese is a historical figure of modern history known for his
support of the civil rights and voting rights movement. Reverend Reese
rose to national prominence as a civil rights leader after Selma's
``Bloody Sunday.'' He later marched with Dr. King from Selma to
Montgomery as an advocate of voting rights.
Reverend Reese was born November 28, 1929. A believer in education,
Reverend Reese graduated from Alabama State University and Livingston
University, and also attended Southern University, the University of
Alabama, and Auburn University before receiving his doctorate of
divinity from Selma University.
Reverend Reese has served the Selma and Dallas County community
faithfully for over six decades, and his exemplary work and commitment
to social justice is well-known. Notably, Reverend Reese has never left
his beloved community of Selma, where he helped to make it a center for
the voting rights movement in the 1960s.
He remains active today, and he is known for saying that his fight
today is to get young people to realize that the movement is still
continuing. ``I tell young people,'' he said, ``that they cannot rest
on our victories. We have to remain committed. That means registering
to vote and participating in what this country has to offer. That means
making a difference to others.''
Reverend Reese has stated that he marched so that everyone,
regardless of color, could become a first-class citizen in America.
Reverend Reese knows that you have to stand for what you believe in. He
became nationally known for his beliefs and inspired others to stand as
well.
Reverend Reese has remained committed to education and service. He
became a principal in Selma, as well as a city council member, serving
for over 12 years on the Selma City Council. He also ran for mayor in
1984 and led a campaign to motivate Walmart executives to hire African
Americans as store managers.
In 2000, he was honored for his civil rights work by having a stretch
of 3 miles of U.S. Highway 80, which was where he led the Montgomery to
Selma March, named after him. It is now known as the Frederick Douglas
Reese Parkway. The FDR Christian Academy in Indiana is also dedicated
to him.
Reverend Reese has been a pastor of Selma's Ebenezer Baptist Church
since 1965. Although he is retired from teaching, he is still very much
active in Ebenezer Baptist Church, where he serves as the head minister
emeritus and delivers a sermon each and every week.
On behalf of the Seventh Congressional District, the State of
Alabama, and this Nation, during this Black History Month, I ask my
colleagues to join me in acknowledging and celebrating the
accomplishments of Reverend Dr. Frederick Douglas Reese from Selma,
Alabama.
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