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‘Good trouble’

Civil rights leader John Lewis to be featured on postage stamp

Free Press wire reports | 12/29/2022, 6 p.m.
Civil rights giant and former U.S. Rep. John Lewis, who spent decades fighting for racial justice, will be honored with ...

WASHINGTON - Civil rights giant and former U.S. Rep. John Lewis, who spent decades fighting for racial justice, will be honored with a postage stamp in 2023. The U.S. Postal Service recently announced that the John Lewis stamp “celebrates the life and legacy” of the leader from Georgia, who risked his life protesting against segregation and other injustices in the violent Jim Crow-era South.

“Lewis spent more than 30 years in Congress steadfastly defending and building on key civil rights gains that he had helped achieve in the 1960s. Even in the face of hatred and violence, as well as some 45 arrests, Lewis remained resolute in his commitment to what he liked to call ‘good trouble,’” the USPS stated in a news release.

In March of 1965, a 25-year-old John Lewis led a march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge from Selma to Montgomery alongside other civil rights leaders, including Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The peaceful protest calling for equal voting rights came to be known as “Bloody Sunday” after Alabama state troopers descended on the nonviolent demonstrators in a brutal attack that left Mr. Lewis with a cracked skull.

The stamp features a photograph of Mr. Lewis taken by Marco Grob on assignment for the Aug. 26, 2013, issue of Time magazine.