Education
He graduated with a bachelor’s degree in biology and chemistry in 1963.
He graduated with a bachelor’s degree in biology and chemistry in 1963.
Guyot, a native of Pass Christian, Mississippi joined the Freedom Movement in Mississippi in 1961, when he was a student at Tougaloo College in Mississippi. Guyot also directed the SNCC-Congress of Racial Equality project in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, and later became director of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party via the Freedom Ballot of 80,000 participants and the Summer Project of 1964. In 1966, Guyot ran for Congress as an anti-war candidate.
Guyot was severely beaten many times, including while at the Mississippi State Penitentiary known as Parchman Farm, in the early 1960s stating of his testicles being burned with sticks by police officers.
Guyot helped lay the groundwork for the Voting Rights Acting of 1965. He received a degree in law in 1971 from Rutgers University, and then moved to Washington, District of Columbia, where he worked for the election of Marion Barry as mayor in 1978.
He continued speaking out on voting rights issues and encouraged people to vote for President Barack Obama. Until his retirement in 2004, Guyot was a program monitor for the District of Columbia Department of Human Services’ Office of Early Childhood Development.
She said he had heart problems and suffered from diabetes.
From the 1990s until the mid-2000s, Guyot often appeared as a commentator on Fox News, defending the legacy of the civil rights movement in heated discussions with hosts Bill O"Reilly and Sean Hannity.