The Good Old Days

Tecumsehsbones

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 18, 2013
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Washington DC
The March was coming, and on 30th Street NW, near Rock Creek Park, people were talking about “troublemakers coming to town;” Charles Nalls was just a kid, but he remembers that. He remembers his neighbor, an FBI agent, talking about Martin Luther King Jr. as “a communist and an agitator.” The cop on the beat advised women in the neighborhood to stay home that day, just to be on the safe side.

It was Aug. 28, 1963, and Paul Kuntzler’s office at the Structural Clay Products Institute near Dupont Circle was shut tight for the day. “There was this fear – people thought there were going to be riots,” says Kuntzler, who went to the march anyway, even though his partner was nervous, even though the president had ordered Army troops and National Guardsmen to be massed nearby, ready for the worst.

Ella Kelly didn’t have to miss work; the D.C. schools were shuttered that day. Teaching American history would have to wait. She intended to see some being made. On Longfellow Street NW, she and her black neighbors read the same stories in the same papers as the whites west of the park read, the same warnings about danger and communists, but she scoffed at those notions. What she worried about was the Washington heat, the potential for sunstroke, and so she hurried down to the monument grounds early in the morning, to help out the Red Cross. She had no idea she’d be the only black volunteer in the health tent.

Out on St. Barnabas Road in Prince George’s County, Jerry Fox’s friends kept asking him, “Do you think there’s going to be any trouble?” As he put on his uniform that morning, the D.C. police officer recalled what he’d been telling anyone who asked: ”We’re going to protect the marchers – don’t worry, they’re well-organized.”

Half a century later, the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom is a historic pivot, a moment preserved in black-and-white footage of King’s “I Have A Dream” speech, in film of blacks and whites together beneath Lincoln’s chair, all dressed as if for church, singing “We Shall Overcome,” listening to Mahalia Jackson and Peter, Paul and Mary, catching glimpses of Marlon Brando and Charlton Heston.

From the distance of two generations, the march was a triumph of hope and daring optimism, a testament to the power of righteous rhetoric, proof that the collective voice of the people paves the way for political and legal change. But in the moment, little of that could be foreseen.

In those steamy days of the summer before the president would be murdered, in that season when men of the law wielded dogs and fire hoses against black Americans who had the audacity to demand equality, in a city that was majority-black but firmly controlled by white authorities, the prospect of a march by hundreds of thousands of Negroes was cause for official caution and popular anxiety.
For the first time since Prohibition, the city banned the sale of alcoholic beverages for the day. Hospitals stockpiled plasma and canceled elective surgeries. The D.C. firemen’s union didn’t like it, but the city had ordered 350 of its members to switch roles and take on police duty on the day of the march. D.C. police officers were banned from taking vacation; other forces received riot control training. Thirty Army helicopters patrolled the skies, swooping low over the Reflecting Pool. Four thousand troops stood ready in the Washington suburbs, and 15,000 paratroopers were placed on stand-by in North Carolina.

The District’s chief judge directed colleagues to be available for all-night bond hearings in case of mass arrests. President John F. Kennedy pre-signed executive orders authorizing military intervention if riots developed.

The Kennedy administration, worried that a black-dominated demonstration would crush the chances that its civil rights bill might pass in Congress, had Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy and Assistant Attorney General Nicholas Katzenbach work with march organizers to recruit whites to attend the event to assure that images of the event were both peaceful and biracial.

Amid all this, the march’s leaders tried to find the right balance between mollifying the president’s concerns and remaining true to their goals. Chief organizer Bayard Rustin insisted that every speech and song be kept brief so the crowd could be ushered out of town before sundown. The march “will be orderly, but not subservient,” organizers announced. “It will be non-violent, but not timid.”

Life in black and white

By August 28, 1963, blacks had demonstrated for voting rights and sat in at lunch counters and won school desegregation cases. But in Washington, life was still very much black or white.

On the day of the march, home builder William Levitt announced that he would not alter the whites-only sales policy at his new Belair development in Bowie. Despite picketing by members of the Congress on Racial Equality, despite a presidential order prohibiting discrimination in the sale of houses with federally guaranteed mortgages, Levitt said blacks could not afford and would not want to live in his development.

“The Negro is the same as any other minority group,” Levitt said. “He is clannish and tends to select neighbors who are of the same background and race.” Unless other builders opened housing to all, Levitt said, he could not afford the decline in sales that would result if blacks enjoyed equal access to his houses.

On the day of the march, The Washington Post published a letter from George P. Lucas of Pikesville, who defended business owners’ right “to pick and choose their patrons for any reason they see fit. They can exclude would-be patrons because of the color of their skin, improper dress or uncleanliness.” Kennedy’s civil rights bill was clearly unconstitutional, Lucas said.

That same day, in Powhatan, Va., 130 miles from the District, 55 black children broke the color barrier at the county’s sole white public school. A federal judge barred the county’s plan to close the school rather than allow black children to enroll. The day proceeded peacefully, in part because 80 percent of white students stayed home rather than share a building with their black neighbors.
In the District, the latest battle over integration followed an order by the city’s commissioners requiring barbers to cut the hair of anyone who sought tonsorial care. The barbers union, Local 239, protested the ruling, arguing that it would take seven years to train its members how to cut black men’s hair.

On the day of the march, Washington’s baseball team, the Senators, did not play its scheduled game against the Minnesota Twins. Two other games, on the night before and on the evening of the march, were scrapped to ease traffic.
But the team’s management used the occasion to announce that they had finally eliminated the last barrier of segregation at their spring training headquarters in Pompano Beach, Fla. The team hotel, the Golden Falcon, a peach stucco place right on the beach, was whites-only; black players had been forced to find somewhere else to sleep.

Now, however, after general manager George Selkirk threatened to take the Senators to another hotel, the Falcon agreed to accommodate all, regardless of color.

At the Capitol, House and Senate members instructed their secretaries to stay home and lock their doors. On NBC’s “Meet the Press,” host Lawrence Spivak, in his first question to NAACP leader Roy Wilkins and King, asked how they could justify holding such a large demonstration when the authorities “believe it would be impossible to bring more than 100,000 militant Negroes into Washington without incidents and possibly rioting.”

On the morning of the 28th, FBI agents, under orders from Director J. Edgar Hoover, phoned Charlton Heston and other celebrities in town for the march and warned them to stay indoors because there was likely to be violence, according to FBI documents cited in “Parting the Waters: America in the King Years 1954-63,” by Taylor Branch.

Days earlier, an FBI intelligence report had concluded that there was little or no communist involvement in the event. Hoover had reacted acidly, scrawling on the report, “This memo reminds me vividly of those I received when Castro took over Cuba.”
“I’m not saying that all those who are marching on Washington are communists,” Alabama Gov. George Wallace (D) told a Roanoke TV station. “I’m saying a lot of fine Negro citizens have been misled in this country and are being used by the communists to exploit them.”

Near the White House, as the crowd gathered, Simon Klennan, a longtime Washingtonian who disregarded his wife’s warnings against going downtown that Wednesday, told a reporter that black citizens were “absolutely justified” in taking to the streets. “They should get their freedom and their liberties and public accommodations and jobs,” he told Al Hulsen, a reporter for the National Educational Radio Network, a precursor of National Public Radio. “But at the same time, I think there’s a lot of communism mixed up in this.”

The reporter asked if he had “any definite evidence that there are communists here?”

“I don’t have any definite evidence, but you can generally pick them out,” Klennan replied.

“How can you do that, sir?”

“Well, by their looks, by their actions and things like that. Take some of these girls that fall all over these colored fellows. . . . I think they’re actually mixed up in this communist movement that’s growing in the country, and I’m afraid of it, I’m afraid of it.”

But Klennan added that his wife’s worries that he’d get into an argument with someone down at the Mall were for naught because ”I don’t think that we’re any better than the next fellow, whether he’s colored or whether he’s a Japanese or a Chinaman or what the devil he is. He’s a human being. We could have all been colored.”

Refining the message

Anxious about the possibility that violence might break out on the day of the march, the Kennedy administration had pressed organizers to permit only preapproved signs and to tamp down attendance by holding the event on a weekday rather than a Saturday.

Some black groups, fearing a public relations debacle, endorsed such limits. The NAACP made its support contingent on getting the crowd in and out of town in a matter of hours. Rustin, the chief organizer, agreed that it was imperative that the march be perceived as a mix of blacks and whites and avoid the “crackpotishness” of sit-ins, fasts and other more confrontational protests that had emerged around the nation.

“Unless we got white people into the street with Negroes for the march, the fight would appear to be between white people and black and not between justice and injustice,” he told The Post.

But other black groups, pushing for more direct action against segregation, said Rustin was caving to the white establishment. Leaders such as Stokely Carmichael boycotted the march; Malcolm X dubbed it the “Farce on Washington.”
“The white man” put his handpicked black leaders in charge of the march, Malcolm X told supporters later. “They took it over. And they invited a priest, a rabbi, and an old white preacher. Yes, an old white preacher. It’s just like when you’ve got some coffee that’s too black, which means it’s too strong. What you do? You integrate it with cream; you make it weak.”

It didn’t look that way in Ella Kelly’s D.C. neighborhood. There, as at Stuart Junior High on Capitol Hill, where she taught, Kelly and her mathematician husband could feel the walls of racial division crumbling. Her mother was a seamstress in Harlem, her stepfather a chef on the New York Central railroad — union members who earned a decent living but were marooned on one side of a racial gulf. A generation later, Kelly says she never “had that segregated experience. I could go to a top school, and once I moved to Washington, I taught together with white teachers and we all got along.”

Not that everything was hunky-dory. When Kelly and her husband tried to rent an apartment at Missouri Avenue and North Capitol Street in 1961, the black woman who managed the building told them, “I’m sorry, but we don’t rent to colored.”
“We just looked at each other and laughed,” Kelly says. “A black woman telling us that! But she was just doing her job.”
In the summer of ’63, Kelly knew black business owners on U Street NW who viewed the march as a threat to their livelihoods.

“Some said we’ll never be accepted fully anyway, so what’s the use. We should focus on building our own community,” she says.
Kelly heard other black people parroting politicians’ messages about communist infiltration of the march. Before the event, the papers predicted riots and political chaos; the Washington Daily News said, “The general feeling is that the Vandals are coming to sack Rome.” But Kelly told friends back in New York that “nothing’s going to happen. My only concern was all those people in their suits and hats on an August Washington day.”

From the Red Cross tent, she made a couple of runs with the ambulance driver to D.C. General Hospital, but the patients’ plaints were all heat-related.
“On television, Godzilla was coming, and there was a sense of fear and terror,” recalls Kelly, now 74. “But then the monster didn’t come, and the cars weren’t crushed.”

An unspoken code

In upper Northwest, Charles Nalls, who would grow up to become a Catholic priest and canon law specialist, was only in third grade, but he could feel the fear. He heard grown-ups call for the National Guard to watch over D.C. streets.

Young Charles spent most of his days with the family’s black maid, Jean Dabney, but there was no talk about race. Charles knew even at a tender age that the silence masked a deep division. There were no black children in his classes at Lafayette Elementary School, and when the carnival came to town, there were separate white nights and colored nights. And it hadn’t been that long since the streetcars would stop in the middle of the 14th Street Bridge so black passengers could move to the back before rolling on into Virginia.

Paul Kuntzler, 21 and in Washington for just two years, had the day off. Since the first reports about the march, he’d planned to be there. For a young gay man from Michigan, the District sometimes seemed a very Southern town. At his first job, a young white female colleague was discovered to have a black boyfriend, and her co-workers – all-white, by policy – felt free to chastise her. At a banking institute where Kuntzler took classes, the instructor began class – all-white, by rule – with a racist joke.

Kuntzler, who went on to co-found the Gay and Lesbian Activists Alliance and the District’s Gertrude Stein Democratic Club, was a regular at civil rights demonstrations, but this one was different. He went alone. His boyfriend, who worked on the Hill, didn’t get the day off. When Kuntzler came home that night, he was eager to tell the story of King’s rousing rhetoric, to describe how he’d seen people’s attitudes change before his eyes. His friend listened, but knowing that the FBI was suspicious about the event, he asked Kuntzler, “Did anybody see you go?”

If communists showed up at the rally, no one found them. The American Nazi Party had promised to produce 10,000 sympathizers, but only 75 turned out, a tribute, party leader George Lincoln Rockwell said, “to the cowardice of the white race.”
Government offices were mostly empty. The Agriculture Department reported 70 percent absenteeism. At offices that were open, far more men than women showed up. Local golf courses reported heavy crowds, even record crowds.

A bus full of protesters was attacked with rocks on the Baltimore-Washington Parkway. But police reported only two arrests among the crowd of 200,000: a Nazi charged with making a speech without a permit and an Arlington man fined $10 for smashing up a demonstrator’s sign.

Ken Collins was a patrol officer at the District’s 12th Precinct on Rhode Island Avenue NE, but on the morning of the march, he was assigned to the Lincoln Memorial. He had seen newsreel footage of blacks demonstrating in the South, “with the dogs and all the police, and people here were concerned it could get violent,” he says.

Collins had grown up in the Petworth section of Northwest, but a few months before the march, had moved to Riverdale in Prince George’s, to a neighborhood dominated by police and firemen.

In that crowd, Collins recalls, there was little worry about the march. The department was already integrated, at least in the rank and file. The schools were racially mixed as well. “Usually, when there’s tension, you can feel it in the air,” says Collins, who is now 78. “I didn’t feel one bit of it.”

At the Lincoln Memorial, Collins was assigned to accompany one of the speakers to the lectern. The officer waited for the speaker, walked up to him, “and our eyes met, and I could see what kind of person he was – understanding, serious. It set my mind straight.”
Collins and King did not speak to each other. But the officer, who had heard of King but knew little of his work, was swept up by the soaring words and determined hope of the address that would move the nation. “I stood there thinking: Why can’t the whole world be like this?” Collins remembers. “Why can’t everyone be about nonviolence and love?”

A year later, he was on vacation in Florida with his wife and two sisters and their husbands. Collins liked to fall asleep with the TV on, and he woke in the middle of the night to see an anniversary program about the March on Washington: “I said, ’Wow,’ because there I was, on TV, right over Dr. King’s left shoulder.”

Jim Crow to go

On the night after the speeches and the songs, eight busloads of black demonstrators heading home stopped at the S&E Truck Center on U.S. 40 in Baltimore County, hungry after a long day in the heat. The staff at the truck stop refused to serve them and called the state police, asking that the blacks be sent on their way.

The police arrived and took a report. They sent it to the state’s Interracial Commission to investigate a possible case of discrimination.

‘There was this fear’ | The Washington Post
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
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Fifty years after Dr. King's I Have a Dream speech .................



Blacks Asked To Leave Restaurant Because Honky Felt Threatened



A group of 25 African Americans waited two hours to get in a Wild Wing Cafe restaurant in North Charleston, South Carolina, only to be asked to leave almost immediately after entering the restaurant because a white patron felt “threatened” by them. One member of the group took his complaint to Facebook when the corporate office of the restaurant did not call him back.


Michael Brown was one of those 25 customers. They were there to send off Brown’s cousin, who was leaving the Charleston area. After finally being seated after the two hour wait, the shift manager came to the table and told the group that there was a “situation.”
According to Brown:
She (the shift manager) said there’s a situation where one of our customers feels threatened by your party, so she asked us not to seat you in our section, which totally alarmed all of us because we’re sitting there peaceably for two hours. Obviously, if we were causing any conflict, we would have been ejected out of the place hours before.
A member of Brown’s group then begin to videotape the situation. That’s when the shift manager asked them to leave and refused to seat them.
As Brown explained:
I asked her – I want to be clear with you. I said, so you’re telling me I have to leave. She said I have a right to deny you service. I said so you’re asking me to leave because you’re upset because he was recording you, after we’ve waited for two hours, and after you’ve already pretty much discriminated on us, and she answered yes.
Brown said that he called the Wild Wing Cafe corporate office several times, and did not get a response. That’s when he and others in his group decided to publicize the racial discrimination that his group received on Facebook.


Blacks Asked To Leave South Carolina Restaurant Because White Customer Felt Threatened (Video)
 

#juan

Hall of Fame Member
Aug 30, 2005
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I listened to the "I have a dream" speech when Martin Luther King first made it. It is still a moving speech
 

damngrumpy

Executive Branch Member
Mar 16, 2005
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kelowna bc
It is still one of the most moving speeches ever made, I think every time its played
a new generation is inspired to take up the cause of equality. Today it is still a
shadow on the land. Inequality because it requires compromises by white, Black,
Brown and others. Today we see more religious intolerance that racial in many
parts of the world and its not the white folks doing the discriminating. Look at the
Middle East, and even the murders in the Streets of London done by those who
immigrated to Britain.
We have a long way to go in the course of human dialogue, but it began with a
speech that the world will never forget.
I also loved the comment Martin Luther King was a communist trouble maker because
he wanted equal rights to life and opportunities. The way the Canadian and American
governments are going they will soon be calling us those names because we want to
preserve our liberties.