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The 'Sit-ins'. Despite.. Supreme Court decisions Protests Civil Rights Act 1957 Segregation was still common in the Southern States. Martin Luther King & organisers of the civil rights campaign decided to use more non-violent, civil disobedience protests to increase pressure for change.
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Despite.. • Supreme Court decisions • Protests • Civil Rights Act 1957 Segregation was still common in the Southern States
Martin Luther King & organisers of the civil rights campaign decided to use more non-violent, civil disobedience protests to increase pressure for change We will not hate you yet we will not obey your evil laws. We shall wear you down with our capacity to suffer. Not one hair of one head of one person should be harmed.
In Greensboro, North Carolina Black people had to stay out of White-owned restaurants • 1st February 1960 - 4 Black students (The Greensboro Four) sat at the ‘whites only’ lunch counter at Woolworth's • When they sat down they faced a sign on the wall…. Lunch Counter No Niggers Served Here
The Greensboro Four Ezell Blair Jnr, David Richmond, Franklin McCain and Joseph McNeil White lady on the left arrived at the counter for lunch but refused to sit down with African Americans so she left.
The Greenboro Four… • Tried to order food but their order was refused • Were asked to move but refused and stayed till closing time • Expected to be arrested, beaten or even worse but were not
Next day (2nd Feb) they returned with another 80 black and white students • The students ‘sat in’ all day despite insults and attacks • By 4th Feb so much chaos had been created that the restaurant in Woolworth’s was forced to close
The students were using non-violent protest to draw attention to illegal segregation • The idea caught on and spread across southern states • Sit-ins protested about segregated swimming pools, libraries, transport facilities, museums, art galleries, parks and beaches
By the end of 1960, 70 000 protesters had taken part in sit-ins
Non-violent protest was met by white violence • TV viewers across US saw peaceful students being insulted, beaten and dragged off to jail • Another slogan was heard from black protesters - ‘Fill the jails’ Why? • Jails in police stations reached bursting point and courts could not cope with the numbers of students breaking state law, something would have to be done Fill the Jails!
Result of the Sit-Ins • Restaurants could not afford the bad publicity and loss of business • Some simply closed to avoid dealing with the issue • By July 1960 segregated lunch counters had disappeared from 100 cities across America • Non-violent direct action and national TV coverage was forcing change
VERY Showed young Blacks they could make a difference Whites were forced through the media to take notice of the ‘race issue’ Showed non-violent protest worked Showed MLK that black students could play crucial role in civil rights movement Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) was formed LIMITED Only brought limited change in towns and cities Segregation and discrimination still existed in southern States How effective were the Sit-Ins?