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OneGrassRoot

(22,920 posts)
Fri Feb 1, 2013, 02:20 PM Feb 2013

Greensboro, NC. February 1, 1960. COURAGE IN ACTION

Courage at the Greensboro Lunch Counter (edit to add: no guns needed, peaceful demonstration)




This link is three years old now but tells their story. We must never, ever forget.

On February 1, 1960, four young African-American men, freshmen at the Agricultural and Technical College of North Carolina, entered the Greensboro Woolworth’s and sat down on stools that had, until that moment, been occupied exclusively by white customers. The four—Franklin McCain, Ezell Blair Jr., Joseph McNeil and David Richmond—asked to be served, and were refused. But they did not get up and leave. Indeed, they launched a protest that lasted six months and helped change America. A section of that historic counter is now held by the National Museum of American History, where the chairman of the division of politics and reform, Harry Rubenstein, calls it “a significant part of a larger collection about participation in our political system.” The story behind it is central to the epic struggle of the civil rights movement.



http://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/Courage-at-the-Greensboro-Lunch-Counter.html
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Greensboro, NC. February 1, 1960. COURAGE IN ACTION (Original Post) OneGrassRoot Feb 2013 OP
Good men. PLARS1999 Feb 2013 #1
kick n/t OneGrassRoot Feb 2013 #2
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