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This Date in History: Sit-Ins Before GSO

  • Thread starter Thread starter donbosco
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There were sit-ins before #Greensboro. I remember so-called ‘legal’ segregation. I recall doors or windows on the side or backs of restaurants where people of color could order and pick-up ‘to go’ orders. I have to imagine that for those people - citizens every one - m mm forced into such ‘second-class’ situations, the memories are harsh, hard, and hurtful. This meanness was systemic and state-backed-it still bears rotten fruit across society.

Teach about it. Learn from it. Do not continue to cover it up nor permit the hidden poison to pollute. There are organized groups, among them many who are powerful on the Right, that are full-time obfuscators, engaged in a crusade to stall the growing effort to bring greater truth into our schools and society. They hatefully misrepresent this effort and hurl buzz words from their platforms and pulpits and in ways that would make Orwell proud assert that the ones who seek to include the entire narrative in our education are the ones that are dividing. Don’t let them fool you. These people are several generations deep in their campaign to sell #FakeHistory. Time to stop them.

#OTD [June 23] 1957 6 youths + Rev. Doug MJ Moore entered segregated Royal Ice Cream in #Durham on the “Whites Only” side and sat down. Arrested for trespassing, a jury found them guilty. Appeals ensued to SCOTUS, who refused to hear the case. The children led. Landmark Sit-Ins Before Woolworth’s
 
Segregation was so anti-free market.
Speaking of historical sit-ins my "radical" grandmother took me to the Greensboro Woolworth sit-in in 1960 . I had just turned 9 years old. She was such an influence in my life and I blame her for me being the dumbass,clueless,woke lib that I am today;)
 
Speaking of historical sit-ins my "radical" grandmother took me to the Greensboro Woolworth sit-in in 1960 . I had just turned 9 years old. She was such an influence in my life and I blame her for me being the dumbass,clueless,woke lib that I am today;)

Wow. Witness to History!! What do you remember?
 
IMG_9440.jpeg

There were sit-ins before #Greensboro. I remember so-called ‘legal’ segregation. I recall doors or windows on the side or backs of restaurants where people of color could order and pick-up ‘to go’ orders. I have to imagine that for those people - citizens every one - m mm forced into such ‘second-class’ situations, the memories are harsh, hard, and hurtful. This meanness was systemic and state-backed-it still bears rotten fruit across society.

Teach about it. Learn from it. Do not continue to cover it up nor permit the hidden poison to pollute. There are organized groups, among them many who are powerful on the Right, that are full-time obfuscators, engaged in a crusade to stall the growing effort to bring greater truth into our schools and society. They hatefully misrepresent this effort and hurl buzz words from their platforms and pulpits and in ways that would make Orwell proud assert that the ones who seek to include the entire narrative in our education are the ones that are dividing. Don’t let them fool you. These people are several generations deep in their campaign to sell #FakeHistory. Time to stop them.

#OTD [June 23] 1957 6 youths + Rev. Doug MJ Moore entered segregated Royal Ice Cream in #Durham on the “Whites Only” side and sat down. Arrested for trespassing, a jury found them guilty. Appeals ensued to SCOTUS, who refused to hear the case. The children led. Landmark Sit-Ins Before Woolworth’s
Great post Don. I too remember the ‘to go’ windows at restaurants that only black people used.
 
IMG_9440.jpeg

Photo in top left corner facing is from the sit-in at Colonial Drug. That store was situated just above The Cave and the owner (I knew his name once) would pass through the bar every day right after 5:00 pm because he would bolt the back door of his business from the inside and then lock the front with a key. Back in the 1990s I was in The Cave often...drank there, had girlfriends that tended there, and ultimately worked there myself so I saw him pass through quite a few times. He never spoke, never even acknowledged the presence of anyone in the place. Meg (The Cave owner at the time) told me that he had never spoken to her either (perhaps he had long before talked with Jim Rideout or Beau the previous owners). I guess he was the staunch segregationist from the 1960s...we always assumed that he was. He had a scowl and a limp (but he was "famous" for his orange-ades among some crowds).
 
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IMG_9440.jpeg

There were sit-ins before #Greensboro. I remember so-called ‘legal’ segregation. I recall doors or windows on the side or backs of restaurants where people of color could order and pick-up ‘to go’ orders. I have to imagine that for those people - citizens every one - m mm forced into such ‘second-class’ situations, the memories are harsh, hard, and hurtful. This meanness was systemic and state-backed-it still bears rotten fruit across society.

Teach about it. Learn from it. Do not continue to cover it up nor permit the hidden poison to pollute. There are organized groups, among them many who are powerful on the Right, that are full-time obfuscators, engaged in a crusade to stall the growing effort to bring greater truth into our schools and society. They hatefully misrepresent this effort and hurl buzz words from their platforms and pulpits and in ways that would make Orwell proud assert that the ones who seek to include the entire narrative in our education are the ones that are dividing. Don’t let them fool you. These people are several generations deep in their campaign to sell #FakeHistory. Time to stop them.

#OTD [June 23] 1957 6 youths + Rev. Doug MJ Moore entered segregated Royal Ice Cream in #Durham on the “Whites Only” side and sat down. Arrested for trespassing, a jury found them guilty. Appeals ensued to SCOTUS, who refused to hear the case. The children led. Landmark Sit-Ins Before Woolworth’s
I was not yet alive during that era, but it blows my mind that proponents of segregation tried to sell the whole “separate but equal” thing. There was absolutely nothing equal when it came to segregation, nor was there the slightest appearance of it.
 
Wow. Witness to History!! What do you remember?
Keep in mind that was 65 years ago and today I'm losing brain cells by the hour:sleep:

I remember that there was a crowd around the Greensboro 4 in support of these brave college students. It was a chaotic environment inside the store which was a bit overwhelming but not threatening. We were there early in the sit in, but I think white counter protestors showed up days later and it became more confrontational as support for the sit in grew.

For those interested in learning more about this historic event, I highly recommend the multiple award winning documentary "February One"

The producer was a fellow "member" of the "Grass Roots Impeachment Movement " ( GRIM ) that supported my Quixotic run for Congress in 2006:p
 
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