South Carolina is getting its only civil rights museum thanks to photographer Cecil Williams

Much of how South Carolina has seen its civil rights history has been through the lens of photographer Cecil Williams. From sit-ins to prayer protests to portraits of African Americans integrating universities and rising to federal judges, Williams has snapped it.

After years of work, Williamsā€™ millions of photographs are being digitized and categorized and his chief dream of aĀ civil rights museumĀ marking how Black Americans fought segregation and discrimination in the state is about to move out of his old house and into a much bigger, and more prominent, building in Orangeburg.

ā€œImages can be very powerful storytelling,ā€ said Williams, who turned 85 last month. ā€œAnd the struggle to get the rights we were due under the U.S. Constitution is a very powerful story.ā€

While Williamsā€™ story and those in his images will be remembered, preservationists and historians worry plenty of African American history is being lost as those who lived during the civil rights era die and their letters, photographs and other mementos of the struggle are tossed out.

ā€œWe talk about superheroes like Superman or the Black Panther. But I wish young people would realize there are superheroes in their neighborhoods who fought injustice every day,ā€ Williams said.

Williams got his first camera when he was 9. A few years later he took one picture of civil rights attorney and later Supreme Court justice Thurgood Marshall getting off a train to work on a segregation case ā€” just one frame because it was dark and flashbulbs were $1 each.