IV
117TH CONGRESS
1ST SESSION
H. RES. 165
Honoring the life and legacy of John Robert Lewis and commending John
Robert Lewis for his towering achievements in the nonviolent struggle
for civil rights.
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
FEBRUARY 25, 2021
Ms. WILLIAMS of Georgia (for herself, Mr. BISHOP of Georgia, Ms. PRESSLEY,
Mr. DANNY K. DAVIS of Illinois, Ms. MOORE of Wisconsin, Ms. CLARKE
of New York, Mr. MCEACHIN, Mr. NEGUSE, Ms. LEE of California, Ms.
NORTON, Ms. KELLY of Illinois, Mr. CARSON, Ms. ADAMS, Mr. EVANS,
Mrs. LAWRENCE, Ms. UNDERWOOD, Mrs. DEMINGS, Ms. PLASKETT, Mr.
TORRES of New York, Mr. JOHNSON of Georgia, Mr. HORSFORD, Mrs.
HAYES, Ms. BASS, Mr. HASTINGS, Mr. RUSH, Mr. BOWMAN, Mr. JONES,
and Mrs. BEATTY) submitted the following resolution; which was referred
to the Committee on House Administration
RESOLUTION
Honoring the life and legacy of John Robert Lewis and
commending John Robert Lewis for his towering achieve-
ments in the nonviolent struggle for civil rights.
Whereas John Robert Lewis (referred to in this preamble as
‘‘Mr. Lewis’’) was born on February 21, 1940, near
Troy, Alabama, the third of 10 children born to his
mother Willie Mae (ne´e Carter) and his father Eddie
Lewis, a sharecropper;
Whereas, at 5 years old, Mr. Lewis was given responsibility
for the family chicken flock, including his favorite, Li’l
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•HRES 165 IH
Pullet, which he tended to with great care and to which
he would preach nearly every evening, which—
(1) led his family to give Mr. Lewis the childhood
nickname of ‘‘Preacher’’; and
(2) instilled in Mr. Lewis an early desire to enter the
clergy;
Whereas, from a young age, Mr. Lewis insisted on attending
school daily, defying his parents’ instructions to work the
family farm, which established within Mr. Lewis a life-
long commitment to education and enlightenment;
Whereas when Mr. Lewis was 15 years old he was ‘‘shaken
to the core’’, as described in his memoir ‘‘Walking With
the Wind’’, by the Mississippi murder of Emmett Till,
deepening his passionate opposition to segregation and
Jim Crow laws;
Whereas, as a high school student, Mr. Lewis intensely fol-
lowed the progress of the Montgomery Bus Boycott (re-
ferred to in this preamble as the ‘‘Boycott’’) in 1955 and
1956, awakening him to the power of nonviolent resist-
ance to segregation;
Whereas Mr. Lewis wrote in his memoir that the Boycott
‘‘changed my life more than any other event before or
since’’;
Whereas, while following the progress of the Boycott, Mr.
Lewis was inspired by radio broadcasts featuring one of
the leaders of the Boycott, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
(referred to in this preamble as ‘‘Dr. King’’)—
(1) whom Mr. Lewis’ parents referred to as ‘‘that
young preacher’’; and
(2) whose example deepened Mr. Lewis’ ambition to
become a minister;
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•HRES 165 IH
Whereas, inspired by Dr. King, Mr. Lewis, on February 16,
1956, 5 days before his 16th birthday, preached his first
public sermon, entitled ‘‘A Praying Mother’’, at Mac-
edonia Baptist Church in Troy, Alabama, which came
from the First Book of Samuel and discussed the exam-
ple of Hannah, mother of Samuel, which sermon made
such an impact that it was published in the Montgomery
Advertiser newspaper;
Whereas, on February 18, 1956, 2 days after Mr. Lewis gave
his first public sermon, a relative of Mr. Lewis, Thomas
Brewer of Columbus, Georgia, a voting rights activist
working with the National Association for the Advance-
ment of Colored People (referred to in this preamble as
the ‘‘NAACP’’), was shot to death by a White man who
was never indicted for the murder;
Whereas Mr. Lewis joined the NAACP in the summer of
1956;
Whereas, in 1958, Mr. Lewis wrote a letter to Dr. King, who
responded with a round trip bus ticket for Mr. Lewis to
visit Montgomery, Alabama, where Mr. Lewis and Dr.
King met at Reverend Ralph David Abernathy’s First
Baptist Church;
Whereas, while a student at the American Baptist Theo-
logical Seminary in Nashville, Tennessee, Mr. Lewis—
(1) was a founding member of the Student Non-
violent Coordinating Committee (referred to in this pre-
amble as the ‘‘SNCC’’); and
(2) organized sit-ins at segregated lunch counters,
pushing Nashville to become the first major city in the
South to begin the desegregation of public facilities;
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•HRES 165 IH
Whereas Mr. Lewis graduated from the American Baptist
Theological Seminary in 1961, and was subsequently or-
dained as a Baptist minister;
Whereas, in 1961, Mr. Lewis became one of the 13 original
Freedom Riders, who challenged segregated interstate
travel throughout the South;
Whereas, at just 23 years old, Mr. Lewis helped organize the
1963 March on Washington, at which—
(1) Dr. King gave his famous ‘‘I Have a Dream’’
speech; and
(2) Mr. Lewis vowed, in his address at the Lincoln
Memorial, to ‘‘splinter the segregated South into a thou-
sand pieces and put them back together in the image of
God and democracy’’;
Whereas Mr. Lewis led demonstrations against racially seg-
regated hotels, restrooms, swimming pools, and public
parks for which he was brutally beaten, left unconscious
in his own blood, and arrested 40 times, spending count-
less nights in county jails and 37 days in Parchman Pen-
itentiary;
Whereas, in 1963, as Chair of the SNCC, Mr. Lewis moved
to Atlanta, Georgia;
Whereas, on March 7, 1965, on what would become known
as ‘‘Bloody Sunday’’, Mr. Lewis led 600 peaceful dem-
onstrators demanding their right to vote across the Ed-
mund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama, where Mr.
Lewis, who suffered a fractured skull, and other dem-
onstrators were met with violence and police brutality;
Whereas, after televised images of the Bloody Sunday vio-
lence in Selma shocked the conscience of the United
States, President Lyndon B. Johnson called for equal
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•HRES 165 IH
voting rights legislation before a joint session of Con-
gress, which evolved into his signing of the Voting Rights
Act of 1965 (52 U.S.C. 10301 et seq.) on August 6,
1965;
Whereas, on December 21, 1968, Mr. Lewis married the love
of his life, Lillian Miles, who was his best friend, closest
ally, and most steadfast supporter until her death on De-
cember 31, 2012, the 45th anniversary of their meeting;
Whereas, in 1970, Mr. Lewis became director of the Voter
Education Project, which added nearly 4,000,000 minor-
ity voters to the voter rolls and changed the political
landscape of the United States forever;
Whereas, in 1977, President Jimmy Carter appointed Mr.
Lewis to direct more than 250,000 volunteers of AC-
TION, which was then a Federal volunteer agency;
Whereas, in 1981, Mr. Lewis won elected office for the first
time as an at-large Councilman on the Atlanta City
Council, where he was a powerful advocate for ethics and
neighborhood preservation, including saving from de-
struction the historic neighborhoods of the Old Fourth
Ward, Inman Park, Candler Park, and Druid Hills;
Whereas, in 1982, Mr. Lewis worked with the American Jew-
ish Committee to found the Atlanta Black-Jewish Coali-
tion, part of his decades-long friendship and alliance with
the Jewish community of Georgia, which later led to the
establishment of the Congressional Black-Jewish caucus;
Whereas, in 1986, Mr. Lewis became the second African
American to represent Georgia in Congress since Recon-
struction;
Whereas Mr. Lewis fought for the passage of the Civil Rights
Act of 1991 (Public Law 102–166; 105 Stat. 1071),
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•HRES 165 IH
which was signed into law by President George H.W.
Bush;
Whereas, in 2001, Mr. Lewis was awarded the John F. Ken-
nedy Library Foundation Profile in Courage Award for
‘‘his extraordinary courage, leadership and commitment
to civil rights’’;
Whereas Mr. Lewis led the effort to build what is now known
as the Sam Nunn Atlanta Federal Center, one of the
largest Federal buildings in the United States;
Whereas, in 2003, Mr. Lewis secured authorization for con-
struction of the National Museum of African American
History and Culture on the National Mall in Washington,
DC;
Whereas, in 2007, Mr. Lewis introduced the Emmett Till Un-
solved Civil Rights Crime Act of 2007 (28 U.S.C. 509
note; Public Law 110–344) to investigate unsolved civil
rights crimes, which was signed into law by President
George W. Bush in 2008;
Whereas, in 2011, President Barack Obama awarded Mr.
Lewis the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest ci-
vilian honor in the United States;
Whereas Mr. Lewis’ colleagues referred to him as the ‘‘con-
science of the Congress’’ for his—
(1) relentless pursuit of justice;
(2) unflinching commitment to building what Dr.
King and Mr. Lewis referred to as the ‘‘Beloved Commu-
nity’’, a society without poverty, racism, or violence; and
(3) willingness to make what he called ‘‘good trou-
ble, necessary trouble’’ to confront acts of injustice; and
Whereas, on July 17, 2020, Mr. Lewis died, devastating his
family, his staff, the City of Atlanta, the State of Geor-
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•HRES 165 IH
gia, and the people of the United States, who united to
honor his monumental legacy of hard work and self-sac-
rifice in the pursuit of liberty and justice for all, which
culminated in Mr. Lewis lying in state at the United
States Capitol before his memorial service at Ebenezer
Baptist Church in Atlanta: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the House of Representatives—
1
(1) honors the life and legacy of John Robert
2
Lewis, an American hero and civil rights leader
3
who—
4
(A) faced brutality and suffered grievous
5
injuries while remaining steadfastly committed
6
to the nonviolent struggle for civil rights;
7
(B) dedicated his life to defending the dig-
8
nity of all people and building the ‘‘Beloved
9
Community’’; and
10
(C) spent more than 3 decades as a Mem-
11
ber of Congress defending and strengthening
12
civil rights; and
13
(2) commends John Robert Lewis for his tow-
14
ering achievements in the nonviolent struggle for
15
civil rights.
16
Æ
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