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Topic: Sit-ins


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In the News (Thu 20 Jun 13)

  
 i&d.Sit Ins
The student-led sit-in at the Woolworth's store was the beginning of the largely youth-led social reform movements of the 1960s.
We requested four stools, a corresponding eight-foot section of counter, mirrors, a soda fountain and a section of cornice, all as close to the original sit-in site as we could determine using historic photographs.
The final hurdle involved negotiations with Sit-in Movement Inc., a small local organization formed by African American residents of Greensboro to purchase and preserve the Woolworth store, and eventually convert it into a national civil rights museum.
www.si.edu /i+d/sitins.arc.html

  
 Ella Baker - Biography on Ella Baker
Sit-ins at lunch counters inspired similar forms of protest at other types of segregated facilities, such as wade-ins at swimming places.
The protest by Joseph McNeil, Ezell Blair Jr., Franklin McCain, and David Richmand marked the beginning of a grassroots sit-in movement led by African American students against the segregated public spaces of the South.
Black or racially integrated groups of students would sit down in white-only spaces and refuse to move until they were served or forcibly removed.
www.africanaonline.com /sit_ins.htm

  
 SNCC-Events: Sit-ins
On February 10, Hampton, Virginia became the first city outside of North Carolina to experience a sit-in, and by the end of the month, sit-ins had occurred in more than thirty communities in seven states.
These sit-ins thrust black student leaders into the spotlight, a position for which they were often unprepared.
The first sit-in on February 1, 1960 in Greensboro, North Carolina, is said to have been the catalyst for an entire movement, including the birth of SNCC.
www.ibiblio.org /sncc/sitin.html

  
 Depot, library bring you the sit-ins
Greensboro Sit Ins: Launch of a Civil Rights Movement
Since the Greensboro sit-ins on Feb. 1, 1960, the News & Record has published dozens of stories about what brought the four N.C. A&T freshmen together in an attempt to integrate F.W. Woolworth's lunch counter.
With the click of a mouse, users can hear how the original four participants planned the sit-ins.
www.greensboro.com /sitins/about.htm

  
 The Southern Sit-Ins
Sit-In Participant in Chattanooga, TN The Origins of the Sit-In Movement
The Sit-ins Spread Rapidly–first through North Carolina and the across the South
Sit-In Activists Cultivated a Studious, Responsible Image in order to:
www-personal.umich.edu /~mcountry/Sitins.html

  
 sit-ins. The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition. 2002
In a sit-in, demonstrators occupy a place open to the public, such as a racially segregated ( see segregation) lunch counter or bus station, and then refuse to leave.
A form of nonviolent protest, employed during the 1960s in the civil rights movement and later in the movement against the Vietnam War.
www.bartleby.com /59/12/sitins.html

  
 Nashville Sit-Ins
On April 19, 1995, the thirty-fifth anniversary of the pivotal march and sit-in movement was observed.
In September of 1990, the Metropolitan Historical Commission erected a historical marker on the southwest corner of Charlotte and Eighth Avenue, North, commemorating the Nashville sit-in movement and its NCLC headquarters, the former site of First Colored Baptist Church (Capitol Hill).
Todd Boulevard (formerly Eighteenth Avenue, North) to commemorate the route of the 1960 civil rights march and the Nashville Sit-In movement.
www.tnstate.edu /library/digital/nash.htm

  
 The Seattle Medium - Article - editorials
Thus, began a sit-in that continued until early August, when the store manager came out one day and announced that the store was losing money and that service would take place on a non-racial basis from then on.
Those who had begun this sit-in were members of the NAACP youth group, including Ezell Blair Jr., Joe McNeil and others later involved in the 1960 Greensboro sit-in.
And whereas few local or national media would write about the 1958 Wichita sit-in, the Oklahoma demonstrations were widely publicized by local and some national media outlets.
seattlemedium.blackpressusa.com /News/article/article.asp?NewsID=6398&sID=34

  
 Greensboro Sit Ins: National Civil Rights Timeline
In just two months the sit-in movement spread to 54 cities in 9 states.
CORE stages its first sit-in at a Chicago restaurant.
Integrated groups of protesters join Freedom Rides on buses across the South to protest segregation.
www.greensboro.com /sitins/timeline.htm

  
 Civil Rights Movement 1955-1965: Sit-Ins
A few days later, 63 protesters were arrested during sit-ins at Nashville's Greyhound and Trailways bus terminals.
C.L. Harris, manager of the store, said of the students, "They can just sit there.
Over Easter Weekend, Ella Baker of the SCLC helped organize a conference of sit-in students from around the nation.
www.watson.org /~lisa/blackhistory/civilrights-55-65/sit-ins.html

  
 Encyclopedia: Nashville, Tennessee
Nashville lies on the Cumberland River in the northwestern portion of the Nashville Basin.
In 1806, Nashville was chartered as a city, and it became the capital of Tennessee in 1843.
Nashville has had a metropolitan government of a consolidated city-county since 1963, and was the first large U.S. city to adopt this structure.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Nashville,-Tennessee   (9677 words)

  
 Nashville sit-ins - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Nashville sit-ins were part of a nonviolent direct action campaign to end racial segregation at lunch counters in Nashville, Tennessee.
Many of the organizers of the Nashville sit-ins went on to become important leaders in the U.S. Civil Rights Movement.
The sit-ins lasted from February to May of 1960 and were notable for their early success and emphasis on disciplined nonviolence.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Nashville_sit-ins   (745 words)

  
 Sit-in - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Fellowship of Reconciliation and the Congress of Racial Equality and FOR conducted sit-ins as early as the 1940s, but the first nationally publicized sit-in was at a Woolworth's in Greensboro, North Carolina, on February 1, 1960.
Sit-ins usually occur indoors at businesses or government offices but they have also occurred in plazas, parks, and even streets.
However, whereas a sit-in involves protesters, a sitdown strike involves striking workers occupying the area in which they would be working and refusing to leave so they can not be replaced with scabs.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Sit-in   (388 words)

  
 Sit-in - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Fellowship of Reconciliation (FOR) and the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) conducted sit-ins as early as the 1940s, but the first nationally publicized sit-in was the Greensboro Sit-In at a Woolworth's in Greensboro, North Carolina, on February 1, 1960.
Sit-ins usually occur indoors at businesses or government offices but they have also occurred in plazas, parks, and even streets.
However, whereas a sit-in involves protesters, a sitdown strike involves striking workers occupying the area in which they would be working and refusing to leave so they can not be replaced with scabs.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Sit-in   (484 words)

  
 King Encyclopedia
NAACP leaders, for their part, gave public support to the sit-ins, although some privately questioned the usefulness of student-led civil disobedience.
The sit-in campaigns of 1960 and the ensuing creation of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) demonstrated the potential strength of grass-roots militancy and enabled a new generation of young people to gain confidence in their own leadership.
Although many of the student sit-in protesters were affiliated with National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) youth groups, the new student movement offered an implicit challenge to the litigation strategy of the nation's oldest civil rights group.
www.stanford.edu /group/King/about_king/encyclopedia/sit_ins.htm   (527 words)

  
 Greensboro 1960
The sit-ins started in 1960 at Greensboro, North Carolina.
The white lady on the left arrived at the counter for lunch but refused to sit down with African Americans; she left.
, 24 students took part in a sit-in at Woolworth’s food counter.
www.historylearningsite.co.uk /greensboro_1960.htm   (1016 words)

  
 Mohonasen History: The 60's World Around Us Sit Ins Page
The Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) pioneered the first sit-in during 1944 in Chicago, but sit-ins did not occur very often and did not have an effect until the 1960’s.
Sit-ins occurred when a group of citizens got together (mostly black) and tried to integrate a public place by not leaving until they were served.
These sit-ins marked the start of the Civil Rights movement.
www.mohonasen.org /staffdev/mhistory/Summersell2/mhwor60sitins.htm   (1016 words)

  
 Nashville Sit_Ins
Tutored by James Lawson, the students who took part in the Nashville sit-ins were followers of Ghandi’s belief in the use of non-violence.
Most of those who led the sit-ins became major figures in the civil rights campaign.
The organisers of the sit-in were concerned that not all those involved in the protest had been schooled in non-violent techniques.
www.historylearningsite.co.uk /nashville_sit_ins.htm   (753 words)

  
 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Papers Project: Encyclopedia
Barry realized that his participation in the sit-ins might cost him his scholarship, but he decided that if he "was not a free man," he "was not a man at all." The Nashville movement proved successful, as stores desegregated their lunch counters.
NAACP leaders, for their part, gave public support to their sit-ins, although some privately questioned the usefulness of student-led civil disobedience.
The student sit-ins of 1960 inspired the creation of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) in April of that year.
www.stanford.edu /group/King/about_king/encyclopedia/sit_ins.htm   (1116 words)

  
 Sit-Ins WEB
People from all over the world did sit-ins after that.
his article is about a sit-in that happened first in Greensboro, North Carolina.
One of the strongest movements was in Nashville, Tennessee.
www.unc.edu /~cmyers/cwilliams.html   (253 words)

  
 Nashville Sit-Ins
On April 19, 1995, the thirty-fifth anniversary of the pivotal march and sit-in movement was observed.
The students were from Nashville's black colleges, including Fisk University, Tennessee A and I State University, Meharry Medical College, and American Baptist Theological Seminary.
Although Nashville was considered to be the "Athens of the South" and a few blacks served on the Board of Education, the city council, and the police force, blacks and whites were racially segregated.
www.tnstate.edu /library/digital/nash.htm   (694 words)

  
 Links and Resources - Action Greensboro
Greensboro's official website, it contains information on services, government, business, and jobs in the city of Greensboro.
The mission of Downtown Greensboro Incorporated is to direct a comprehensive economic development program to strengthen Downtown as: The heart of the city for all citizens, An active and prosperous place for businesses and employees, A center for artistic and cultural experiences, and A vibrant urban environment for residents, workers, and visitors.
This site provides reliable information on voting, current elected officials, current candidates, as well as pending issues and legislation.
www.actiongreensboro.org /resources.html   (540 words)

  
 Beginning
Harold Flemming, who was director of the Southern Regional Council in 1960, said recently, "Just as the Supreme Court decision was the legal turning point, the sit-ins were the psychological turning point in race relations in the South."
The sit-ins were, without question, productive of the most change.
Perhaps the Greensboro sit-in was merely the catalyst that needed to be added to the existing chemicals of the 1954 school desegregation decision, the Montgomery bus boycott, and the emerging nations of Africa, in order to liberate the damned-up rivers of idealism, energy, and courage that cascaded through the South those first weeks of 1960.
www.nathanielturner.com /beginningsitinmovement.htm   (1517 words)

  
 The History of CORE
The protest by Joseph McNeil, Ezell Blair Jr., Franklin McCain and David Richmand marked the beginning of a grassroots sit-in movement led by CORE against the segregated public spaces of the South.
Black or racially integrated students and CORE organizers would sit down in white-only spaces and refuse to move until they were served or forcibly removed.
Although there had been a few sit-in protests before 1960, including two in 1943, the mass mobilization of 1960 was new.
www.core-online.org /history/sit_ins.htm   (486 words)

  
 Greensboro Sit-Ins - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Although they were refused service, they were allowed to stay at the counter, touching off sit-ins and economic boycotts that were a landmark of the American civil rights movement.
Six months after the sit-ins began, the original four protesters were served lunch at the same Woolworth's counter.
This sit-in inspired all the others during the Civil Rights Movement.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Greensboro_Sit-Ins   (215 words)

  
 Atlanta Sit-Ins 1960-61
Greensboro Sit-Ins:  Launch of the Civil Rights Movement
sit-in movement is ultimately characterized by the protesting youth’s dedication to the principles of nonviolence and determination to achieve equality in the South’s most progressive city.
sit-in movement it is necessary to take a brief look at the history of this particular form of nonviolent protest.
www.arches.uga.edu /~mgagnon/students/3090/04SP3090-Dunivant.htm   (3113 words)

  
 SNCC-Events: Sit-ins
The conference was held in Raleigh at Shaw University on April 16, 1960; and from this, a comparatively insignificant SNCC was born.
On February 10, Hampton, Virginia became the first city outside of North Carolina to experience a sit-in, and by the end of the month, sit-ins had occurred in more than thirty communities in seven states.
Though the Greensboro sit-ins had been temporarily discontinued, the idea had spread to other students across the state.
www.ibiblio.org /sncc/sitin.html   (385 words)

  
 International Civil Rights Center & Museum :: History
Interestingly, the lunch counter at the Woolworth's store in Greensboro, where the sit-ins catapulted the movement throughout the South, did not serve a single black until July 25, 1960, several months after others had submitted to the pressures of the sit-in technique and integrated their dining facilities.
Perhaps the single greatest achievement of the Greensboro sit-ins, one which distinguished them from all previous efforts at protest, was the difference in the message they carried.
The message was clear: The Greensboro sit-ins and the events they spawned had changed forever the form of communications between white and black Americans.
www.sitinmovement.org /history/aftermath.asp   (1015 words)

  
 Untitled Document
By participating in a sit-in, there was an act of defiance, their major source of strength was in their refusal (a refusal to accept something unjust).
The account compares to the account of the sit-in by saying that they did not choose to boycott buses or "separate but equal" facilities but that they chose the restaurant to make their statement.
Everywhere but in the South, blacks and whites could sit and eat together at the counters.
www.assumption.edu /users/McClymer/his261/GreensboroNotes.html   (2644 words)

  
 Greensboro Sit-Ins.
Sit-ins rightly will be seen as the means that started a decade of revolt, and was also considered one of the greatest movements in history towards self-determination and dignity.
After hearing the sit-ins, people began to realize from all over the nation what had to be done to stop the process of desegregation.
Coursework and Essays: By Level: GCSE: History: By Country Or Region: United States: Greensboro Sit-Ins
www.coursework.info /i/40795.html   (480 words)

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