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d_ The Sit-Insr Silver Day A look at the lessons 25 years later By William Chafe Twenty-five years ago Feb. 1, four young black freshmen at Greensboro's N.C. A&T College walked into the downtown shopping district, entered the local Woolworth's, purchased some small items, then sat at the lunch counter and asked for a cup of coffee. "We don't serve Negroes," the students were told. But they refused to leave their seats. The next day they returned, accompanied by 23 of their classmates. The day after it was 6,>. The next day more than a hundred. By the end of the week a thousand students joined them in downtown Greensboro, flooding the streets. Within two months, similar demonstrations had broken out in 54 cities in nine different states. An entire generation had been waiting to act, needing only a catalyst, and the Greensboro sit-ins had provided the spark. America would never be quite the same again. In looking back to those early days of 1960, the mind is buffeted by conflicting images and thoughts. How long ago, it seems. Yet how recent. How simple and pure. Yet how complicated and difficult. How far we have come. Yet how little has changed. Where did they get the courage? How did we, or others like us, respond with such indifference and caution? How wonderful that finally such a moral travesty was corrected. How horrible that, underneath it "all, the substance of our social relations has remained so intact. How long? Too long. When? Maybe never, unless somehow, sometime, some way, we find another spark. Some lessons do come through, loud and clear. First is the fact that these young protestors did not come to their action as if in a divine miracle. Rather, they were the product of a struggle as old as slavery, as close to home as their own parents, teachers and friends. Many <if their fathers and mothers had been activists. Some belonged to the NAACP, others to churches which had been in the forefront of efforts to build a better political and educational life for blacks. Many of the sit-in dem- had attended Greensboro's Dudley 1~ School, the pride of the black c ity and a place where teachers taught you to aspire to be the best that was in yqu. "I had to tell youngsters," recalled Dudley English teacher Nell Coley, "I don't care if they push and shove you, you must not accept discrimination . . . You are who you are." The message the young protestors heard at school was reinforced at home and in the church. Some of the young students had belonged to the NAACP Youth Group, where each week they discussed such national events as the Montgomery Bus Boycott and the fight against desegregation in Little Rock, and wondered how to bring the lessons of those experiences back home to Greensboro. When Martin Luther King, Jr., came to The North Carolin; They believed totally in America. They had faith that white people, once shown the immorality of discrimination, would abolish it posthaste. Greensboro in 1958 to preach about Chri; message to America, things began to fall ir place. King's sermon was "so strong," o demonstrator recalled, "that I could feel my I heart palpitating. It brought tears to my eyes." The first lesson of Greensboro, then, was | that the sit-ins were the result of a long gestation process, reflecting the strength, the o mitment and the resiliency of segregated ir tutions in a segregated community where years family, friends and teachers had been I building the foundations for freedom. The second lesson had to do with Greensboro itself, a microcosm of North Carolina's "moderate" and self-defined "progressive'1 white population — perhaps even a microcosm of white America. Greensboro's political and | economic leaders practiced a very sophisticated form of racism. In 1957, the school board approved "token" I integration, admitting six blacks to previously I all-white schools. They took pride in the favor- " able national publicity that resulted. But as school board chairman later said, the aci was taken, not to.promote integration, but to I "hold an umbrella" over the rest of the state I and preserve segregation, since as long as one | or two school districts had token desegregation, it would be impossible for the NAACP tc launch a class-action suit against the entire state. Thereafter, no matter how many black | parents applied for transfer of their children to I previously all-white schools, the board stood I Once, when the parents of four children I brought suit and threatened to blow open the I entire desegregation process, the school board I seemed to concede, admitting the four s dents to their formerly all-white neighborhood I schools. But then, two months later, it trans- [ ferred every white student and faculty member I out of the schools, replacing all of them w blacks. When the parents went back to cour protest, the board said that their case \ "moot" because now the students were as- I signed to the schools that they had initially I applied to attend. It was, one white observer I said, "One of the cleverest legal maneuvers yet I used in the desegregation field."
Object Description
Title | Sit-Ins' Silver Day: A look at the lessons 25 years later |
Date | 1985-01-18 |
Creator | Chafe, William H., 1942- |
Contributors | Harris, Clarence Lee |
Biographical/historical note |
William H. Chafe was born in Boston, Massachusetts, in 1942. He was raised in Cambridge, attended the public schools there, and then went to Harvard College, where he graduated magna cum laude in history in 1962. After a year at Union Theological Seminary in New York, he taught for two years at Columbia Grammar School, a private preparatory school in New York City. Starting in 1965, he was a student in the graduate program in American history at Columbia University where he received his Ph.D. in 1971. He taught for one year at Vassar College, and then in 1971 began his career at Duke University. Much of Dean Chafe's professional scholarship reflects his long-term interest in issue of race and gender equality. His dissertation and first book focused on the changing social and economic roles of American women in the fifty years after the woman suffrage amendment. Subsequent books compared the patterns of race and gender discrimination in America. His book on the origins of the sit-in movement in North Carolina helped to re-orient scholarship on civil rights toward social history and community studies. Chafe has written two books on the history of post-World War II America, and a biography of the liberal crusader Allard Lowenstein. The author of eight books overall, he has received the Robert F. Kennedy Book Award (1981) for Civilities and Civil Rights: Greensboro, North Carolina and the Black Struggle for Freedom (1980) and the Sidney Hillman book award (1994) for Never Stop Running: Allard Lowenstein and the Struggle to Save American Liberalism (1993). Professor Chafe's activities at Duke have also reflected these interests. He has been co-director of the Duke Oral History Program, and its Center for the Study of Civil Rights and Race Relations; he is a founder and the former Academic Director of the Duke-UNC Center for Research on Women; he is also a founder and senior research associate of the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University. In 1988 he was named the Alice Mary Baldwin Distinguished Professor of History. He is the recipient of numerous fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Rockefeller Foundation, the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation, the National Humanities Center, and the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavior Sciences. From 1990 to 1995 Chafe chaired the Duke University Department of History. In 1995 he became Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences and in 1997 added to that title new responsibilities as Dean of Trinity College. He has most recently been appointed Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education. He is married to Lorna Waterhouse Chafe, Coordinator of Child Care Services at Duke. They have two children, Christopher, 30, and Jennifer, 28. -From Chafe's personal webpage, http://www.aas.duke.edu/admin/deans/faculty/chafe.html. |
Subject headings | Greensboro Sit-ins, Greensboro, N.C., 1960;Segregation in education--United States |
Topics | School desegregation, 1954-1958;Business desegregation and sit-ins, 1960;Business desegregation |
Place | Greensboro (N.C.) |
Description |
This article was published in the biweekly North Carolina Independent in commemoration of the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Greensboro sit-ins at Woolworth's. Written by Duke University historian, William Chafe, the article provide historical context for the Greensboro sit-ins and describes how the sit-ins became a catalyst to other civil rights demonstrations nationwide. Chafe asserts that white Greensboro leaders " practiced a very sophisticated form of racism" after segregation was ruled unconstitutional. For instance, Chafe alleges that in Greensboro, there was "token" integration in places like Greensboro that prevented the NAACP from launching a class-action suit against the entire state. This article was saved in a scrapbook by Clarence "Curly" Harris, manager of the Greensboro Woolworth store at the time of the sit-ins. In addition to the clipping, Harris offers a "correction" to the numbers mentioned in the article, but does not dispute its historical accuracy. |
Type | text |
Original format | clippings;scrapbooks |
Original dimensions | 9" x 11" |
Original publisher | [Place of publication not identified] : [publisher not identified] |
Language | en |
Contributing institution | Martha Blakeney Hodges Special Collections and University Archives, UNCG University Libraries |
Source collection | MSS141 Clarence Lee Harris Papers, circa 1916-1997 |
Series/grouping | 6 Scrapbooks |
Box | 3 |
Folder | Folder 3: Scrapbook 8: Sit In, 25 Year Anniversary, 1985 |
Finding aid link | http://libapps.uncg.edu/archon/index.php?p=collections/controlcard&id=506 |
Rights statement | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ |
Additional rights information | IN COPYRIGHT. This item is subject to copyright. Contact the contributing institution for permission to reuse. |
Object ID | MSS0141.003.003.0934 |
Digital publisher | The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, University Libraries, PO Box 26170, Greensboro NC 27402-6170, 336.334.5305 -- http://library.uncg.edu/ |
Sponsor | LSTA grant administered by the North Carolina State Library -- http://statelibrary.ncdcr.gov/ld/grants/lsta.html |
OCLC number | 884368169 |
Page/Item Description
Title | Page 1 |
Full text |
d_
The Sit-Insr Silver Day
A look at the lessons 25 years later
By William Chafe
Twenty-five years ago Feb. 1, four young
black freshmen at Greensboro's N.C. A&T
College walked into the downtown shopping
district, entered the local Woolworth's, purchased some small items, then sat at the lunch
counter and asked for a cup of coffee.
"We don't serve Negroes" the students were
told. But they refused to leave their seats. The
next day they returned, accompanied by 23 of
their classmates. The day after it was 6,>. The
next day more than a hundred. By the end of
the week a thousand students joined them in
downtown Greensboro, flooding the streets.
Within two months, similar demonstrations
had broken out in 54 cities in nine different
states. An entire generation had been waiting
to act, needing only a catalyst, and the Greensboro sit-ins had provided the spark. America
would never be quite the same again.
In looking back to those early days of 1960,
the mind is buffeted by conflicting images and
thoughts. How long ago, it seems. Yet how
recent. How simple and pure. Yet how complicated and difficult. How far we have come. Yet
how little has changed. Where did they get the
courage? How did we, or others like us, respond with such indifference and caution?
How wonderful that finally such a moral
travesty was corrected. How horrible that,
underneath it "all, the substance of our social
relations has remained so intact. How long?
Too long. When? Maybe never, unless somehow, sometime, some way, we find another
spark.
Some lessons do come through, loud and
clear. First is the fact that these young protestors did not come to their action as if in a
divine miracle. Rather, they were the product
of a struggle as old as slavery, as close to home
as their own parents, teachers and friends.
Many |