This website was produced by students in Rockingham County Public Schools who participated in the Farmville Tour Guides independent study course. Each subpage of our site addresses the events that led to a singular day in the civil rights history of Farmville and Prince Edward County. During the course of our research, we were able to tour the Moton Museum and visit the actual grounds where these various events unfolded. We also had the distinct honor of interviewing a number of civil rights pioneers who witnessed and participated in these pivotal events. We would like to thank the Moton Museum, Longwood University, and the Rockingham Educational Foundation, Inc. (REFI) for making this invaluable learning experience possible. We are particularly indebted to our interviewees for their willingness to share their stories, but more importantly, we would like to take this opportunity to thank them for giving us a better world in which to live. Our work is dedicated in their honor: Ms. Joan Johns-Cobbs, Ms. Joy Cabarrus-Speakes, the Reverend J. Samuel Williams, Jr., Ms. Patsy Franklin, Mr. Ken Woodley, and the members of the Ewell family who moved from Farmville to integrate Rockingham County Public Schools in 1964.