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Monthly Archives: May 2018
On this day in history, May 21, 1961 –National Guard Disperses White Crowd Threatening Freedom Riders in Montgomery, Alabama
The Freedom Riders were an interracial group of civil rights activists who began riding interstate buses in 1961 to test Supreme Court decisions that prohibited discrimination in interstate passenger travel. Their efforts were unpopular with whites who supported continued segregation. … Continue reading
On this day in history, May 21, 1961 — National Guard Disperses White Crowd Threatening Freedom Riders in Montgomery, Alabama
The Freedom Riders were an interracial group of civil rights activists who began riding interstate buses in 1961 to test Supreme Court decisions that prohibited discrimination in interstate passenger travel. Their efforts were unpopular with whites who supported continued segregation. … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Alabama Governor John Patterson, civil rights activists, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Equal Justice Initiative, First Baptist Church, Freedom Riders, Jackson Mississippi, Montgomery Alabama, National Guard, Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth, Rev. Ralph Abernathy, Segregation, U.S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, United States Marshals, white mob violence
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On this day in history, May 20, 1961 — Mob Attacks Freedom Riders in Montgomery, Alabama
On May 16, 1961, mob violence in Birmingham, Alabama, threatened to prematurely end the Freedom Ride campaign organized by the Congress on Racial Equality. The Nashville Student Movement, an interracial group of twenty-two college students studying in Tennessee, volunteered to … Continue reading
Posted in Lest We Forget, race
Tagged Alabama Governor John Patterson, Attorney General Robert Kennedy, Birmingham Alabama, Congress on Racial Equality, Equal Justice Initiative, John Lewis, John Seigenthaler, KKK, Ku Klux Klan, Montgomery Alabama, Montgomery Public Safety Commissioner L.B. Sullivan, Nashville Student Movement, Police Commissioner Eugene "Bull" Connor, white mob violence
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On this day in history, May 19, 1994 — Justice Department Sues After Principal Threatens to Cancel Prom Due to Interracial Couples
On February 24, 1994, Hulond Humphries, principal of Randolph County High School in Wedowee, Alabama, announced at a student assembly that the school’s prom would be canceled if interracial couples attended. When a biracial student stood and asked whom she … Continue reading
On this day in history, May 18, 1980 — Protests Continue After Four Police Officers Are Acquitted of Beating Arthur McDuffie
On December 17, 1979, Arthur McDuffie, a 33-year-old African American insurance sales representative, was riding a motorcycle when he was signaled to pull over by Metro-Dade Police Department (MDPD) officers in Miami, Florida. Mr. McDuffie did not comply, beginning an … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Arthur McDuffie, Equal Justice Initiative, MDPD, Miami Florida, police brutality
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On this day in history, May 17, 1954 — United States Supreme Court Declares Racial Segregation of Public Schools Unconstitutional
The Supreme Court’s landmark decision in Brown v. Board of Education grew out of several cases challenging racial segregation in school districts across America, filed as part of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund’s strategy to bar the practice nationwide. Because the lawsuits … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Brown v. Board of Education, Linda Brown, NAACP, Oliver Brown, Plessy v. Ferguson, racial segregation in public schools, Segregation, separate but equal, Separate educational facilities are inherently unequal, Supreme Court, Thurgood Marshall, Topeka Kansas
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On this day in history, May 16, 2012 North Carolina Attempts to Compensate Eugenics Victims
On May 16, 2012, the North Carolina legislature considered a bill recommending compensation for victims of the state’s forced sterilization program. Beginning in 1933, the Eugenics Board of North Carolina oversaw approximately 7600 forced sterilizations. In contrast with other eugenics … Continue reading
On this day in history, May 15, 1916 — Jesse Washington Brutally Lynched in Waco, Texas
On May 15, 1916, after an all-white jury convicted Jesse Washington of the murder of a white woman, he was taken from the courtroom and burned alive in front of a mob of 15,000. When he was accused of killing … Continue reading
Posted in crime, Lest We Forget, race
Tagged Elizabeth Freeman, Equal Justice Initiative, Jesse Washington, Lynching, NAACP, Waco Texas
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On this day in history, May 14, 1961 –Freedom Riders Attacked in Anniston, Alabama
The Freedom Riders, an interracial group of civil rights activists, began riding interstate buses in 1961 to test Supreme Court decisions that prohibited discrimination in interstate passenger travel. Their efforts were unpopular with whites who supported segregation. On Mother’s Day, … Continue reading
On this day in history, May 13, 1956 — Four White Men Kidnap and Rape Black Girl in Tylertown, Mississippi
On May 13, 1956, sixteen-year-old Annette Butler of Tylertown, Mississippi, was kidnapped and gang raped by four white men. Ms. Butler and her family reported the assault and the men were arrested, jailed, and tried for the crime – a … Continue reading