SITTING DOWN TO STAND UP: REMEMBERING GREENSBORO 1960:
Monday, February 1, 2010
(DC Labor)
February 1, 1960, began as a crisp
winter’s day half a century ago. But by the end
of the day, U.S. race relations would be
changed forever. On that day, four
neatly-dressed African-Americans students
quietly took their seats
a t a
Woolworth’s lunch counter and asked to be
served. Such an occurrence wouldn’t draw a
moment’s attention today, but in 1960 in
Greensboro, North Carolina, only white people
were allowed to sit and eat. Blacks could eat
standing up. They were allowed to cook meals,
wash dishes and clean up the counter, but
Blacks were forbidden to serve meals to
customers. These rules were just a few of the
many that segregated the races throughout the
American South. “I…gained my manhood by that
simple act,” said Franklin Eugene McCain, whose
sit-in with Ezell A. Blair Jr., David Leinhall
Richmond and Alfred McNeil helped spark the
American civil rights movement. The four young
men were denied service but refused to leave
their seats. The waitresses were told to ignore
the students, who remained in their seats,
under the watchful eye of local police called
in by the store manager, until the store
closed. The next day, the four students
returned with nearly 30 of their classmates.
The day after that, scores of new students
joined the Greensboro sit-in. Members of the
school’s football team showed up at the lunch
counter to serve as a physical deterrent to
anybody seeking to stop the growing protest.
Sit-ins by high school and college students
spread to other cities throughout North
Carolina and the South. In a vain attempt to
stem the wave of sit-ins, the Greensboro
Woolworth’s lunch counter was closed. When the
Woolworth’s lunch counter re-opened after
several months of talks, it served meals to
people of all races. A section of the lunch
counter has been preserved and is on display at
the National Museum of American History
here in Washington, where it serves as a
tangible reminder that though segregation is
gone, injustices remain in our land and that
the power to battle for our rights still rests
in our hands. - by Roger
Newell. A Strategic Campaigner at the Teamsters
and the Co-Chair of DC Jobs with Justice,
Newell is a member of the National Writers
Union, UAW Local 1991. The Woolworth’s lunch
counter – along with historic photos and a
50-year timeline of the civil rights movement –
is in the National Museum of American History’s
2 East section. Photo (left) by Chris
Garlock