Impacting the world forever, voters in Montgomery, Ala., unequivocally chose Steven L. Reed as the main African American chairman in the a long time since the city's establishing.
His triumph resounded well past Montgomery the same number of praised the achievement in a city recognized as both the support of the Confederacy and the origin of the social liberties development.
Montgomery, where around 60 percent of occupants are dark, was the primary capital of the Confederate States of America, turning into a bastion of racial savagery and separation in the Jim Crow period yet additionally of fights and obstruction in the social equality time.