John McFerren (1924-2020)

May 27, 2020 
/ Contributed By: Samuel Momodu

|John McFerren|

John McFerren

© Benjamin L. Hooks Institute

John McFerren was a civil rights activist best known for his involvement in the Tent City campaign of Fayette and Haywood Counties in the early 1960s. McFerren was born on October 28, 1924 to Eugene and Estella McFerren in the town of Somerville, the county seat of Fayette County, Tennessee. Much of McFerren’s early life is unknown but what is known is that he was a World War II veteran. During the summer of 1959, McFerren led a voter registration campaign for African Americans who had been denied the right to vote in Fayette County.

McFerren focused the campaign around the 1940 trial of Burton Dodson, an African American man who allegedly killed a white deputy during a shootout. Dodson was found guilty of second-degree murder and sentenced to 20 years in prison. Many people in the black community believed that the shooting occurred because the white deputes wanted to lynch Dodson. Resentment against the local political establishment, which many blacks believe was responsible for Dodson’s death, simmered for years until McFerren and other activists initiated their campaign. They argued that if blacks could vote in this predominantly African American county, they could put in office more sympathetic county officials and sit as jurors in trials involving black citizens.

As the voting registration drive gained momentum, many Fayette County whites who resented the prospect of black voting started an organized retaliation campaign against McFerren, his family, and other civil rights activists in Fayette County. Since many of the new voters were sharecroppers, white landowners began evicting them, making the blacks homeless.

In response, African American farmers who owned their own land in Fayette County allowed their property to be used to set up homes for the evicted families in surplus Army tents. Those encampments became known as Tent City. African Americans lived in these tents from December 1959 to April 1963 when they were finally disbanded. On January 25, 1961, with national and international outrage occurring, newly elected President John F. Kennedy vowed to protect the constitutional right of African Americans to vote in Fayette County. President Kennedy also ordered the federal government to send surplus food to feed the homeless families in Fayette County.

McFerren and his wife Viola H. McFerren, who was a civil rights activist in her own right, began a parallel campaign to desegregate Fayette County schools and public accommodations and increase educational and economic opportunities for African Americans in the county. In 1965, the activists successfully sued the Fayette County Board of Education to integrate Fayette County public schools. They also conducted sit-ins, demonstrations, and protest marches in their efforts to improve conditions for African Americans. Key to that improvement was political participation through access to the ballot box.

After the local civil rights campaign ended, the McFerrens opened McFerren’s Grocery and Oil Company that provided food, gasoline, and other services to local residents for more than 50 years. McFerren married Viola Harris in 1950. The couple had four children, Jacqueline McFerren, Claudia McFerren-Jones, Daphene R. McFerren and Harris N. McFerren.

John McFerren died on April 4, 2020 from natural causes in Fayette County, Tennessee. He was 95 years old.

About the Author

Author Profile

Samuel Momodu, a native of Nashville, Tennessee, received his Associate of Arts Degree in History from Nashville State Community College in December 2014 and a Bachelor of Arts Degree in History from Tennessee State University in May 2016. He received his Master of Arts Degree in history from Southern New Hampshire University in June 2019.

Momodu’s main areas of research interest are African and African American History. His passion for learning Black history led him to contribute numerous entries to BlackPast.org for the last few years. Momodu has also worked as a history tour guide at President Andrew Jackson’s plantation home near Nashville, the Hermitage. He is currently an instructor at Tennessee State University. His passion for history has also helped him continue his education. In 2024, he received his Ph.D. in History from Liberty University, writing a dissertation titled The Protestant Vatican: Black Churches Involvement in the Nashville Civil Rights Movement 1865-1972. He hopes to use his Ph.D. degree to become a university professor or professional historian.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Momodu, S. (2020, May 27). John McFerren (1924-2020). BlackPast.org. https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/john-mcferren-1924-2020/

Source of the Author's Information:

“John McFerren,” Tennessee Encyclopedia, https://tennesseeencyclopedia.net/entries/john-and-viola-mcferren/; “John McFerren,” UNC University Liberty, https://blogs.lib.unc.edu/shc/index.php/2019/03/11/john-mcferren-of-fayette-county-tennessee-in-his-own-words/; “John McFerren,” Tennessee State University Digital Liberty, http://ww2.tnstate.edu/library/digital/tent.htm; “John McFerren,” Reddit, https://www.reddit.com/r/memphis/comments/fv1d1p/john_mcferren_leader_of_the_fayette_county/.

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