Viola Liuzzo

@Civil Rights Activists, Life Achievements and Family

Viola Liuzzowas an American Unitarian Universalist civil rights activist

Apr 11, 1925

AssassinationPennsylvaniaAmericanActivistsCivil Rights ActivistsAries Celebrities
Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: April 11, 1925
  • Died on: March 25, 1965
  • Nationality: American
  • Famous: Activists, Civil Rights Activists
  • City/State: Pennsylvania
  • Known as: Viola Fauver Gregg
  • Childrens: Anthony Liuzzo Jr., Mary Liuzzo Lilleboe, Penny Herrington, Sally Liuzzo Prado, Tommy Liuzzo

Viola Liuzzo born at

California, Pennsylvania, United States

Unsplash
Birth Place

Viola Liuzzo first marriage was at the age of 16 to an older man. However, the marriage lasted not more than one day.

Unsplash
Personal Life

In 1943, she married George Argyris, a restaurant manager. The couple was blessed with two children, Penny and Evangeline Mary. The marriage however, did not last long and the two divorced in 1949.

Unsplash
Personal Life

Her third husband Anthony Liuzzo was a Teamsters union business agent. The couple had three children, Tommy, Anthony, Jr., and Sally.

Unsplash
Personal Life

Viola Liuzzo was bornViola Fauver Gregg on April 11, 1925, in the small town of California, Pennsylvania, to Heber Ernest Gregg and Eva Wilson. Her father was a coal miner and World War I veteran, and her mother was a teacher. She was the eldest daughter of her parents and had a younger sister, Rose Mary.

Unsplash
Childhood & Early Life

Viola Liuzzo since early years witnessed major financial difficulties. Great Depression had caused the family to descend into poverty. They moved from Georgia to Chattanooga for work. They lived miserly and interrible conditions.

Unsplash
Childhood & Early Life

Academically, Viola could never complete a whole year in same school, as her family constantly shifted for work. Early in her life, she realized the unjustness that prevailed. Despite being poor and in deprived condition, the family still had some social privileges and amenities that were denied to African Americans.

Unsplash
Childhood & Early Life

The discrimination prevalent against African Americans laid the roots of activism in Liuzzo. Though her social activism never impressed her dad, she nevertheless dropped out of school after tenth to pursue her social activities.

Unsplash
Childhood & Early Life

In 1941, the family moved to Michigan. The year was quite an eventful one in Viola’s life.She ran away from home to marry an elderly man but the marriage did not last for more than one day. She then returned to her family in Detroit, Michigan.

Unsplash
Childhood & Early Life

Upon completing her studies, in 1964, Liuzzo enrolled at the First Unitarian Universalist Church of Detroit. She also joined the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), where she befriended Sarah Evans, an African-American woman.

Unsplash
Career

Along with Evans, shewas passionately involved in civil rights movement. She organized various conferences and protest. She single-handedly planned the Detroit protest against Detroit laws that allowed students to easily drop out of school.Taking them out of school, she purposely homeschooled them for two months. For the act, she was arrested, but pleaded guilty and was put on probation.

Unsplash
Career

In February 1965, an African-American lad, Jimmie Lee Jackson, was shot dead by state troopers. His death stirred a series of protest and fight for civil rights. A protest march was scheduled by Southern Christian Leadership Conference during which the marchers wereattacked by state and local police officers. The day was later called ‘Bloody Sunday’, as more than 600 marchers were brutally assaulted by the troopers.

Unsplash
Career

‘Bloody Sunday’ led to a second protest march a few days later. This time however Martin Luther King Jr. headed the march to Montgomery from Selma along with other 1,500 civil rights advocates. Upon encountering state police along the way, they returned to Selma. Same night, a white group beat James Reeb, a Unitarian Universalist minister from Boston and civil rights activist to death.

Unsplash
Career

Reed’s death stirred civil right activists further who organized a third protest in Wayne State of which Viola Liuzzowas a part.She was tasked with the duty of providing aid to various locations, welcoming and recruiting new volunteers and transporting them and the marchers to and from airports, bus terminals and train stations in her car.Rev Martin Luther King Jr. headed the march.

Unsplash
Career