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The Power of the Youth

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(From left) Joseph McNeil and Franklin McCain, two of the Greensboro Four who the day before had sat at the "whites only" counter of a Woolworth store, came back on Feb. 2, 1960, with two others — Billy Smith and Clarence Henderson.  Courtesy Jack Moebes/Greensboro News & Record
(From left) Joseph McNeil and Franklin McCain, two of the Greensboro Four who the day before had sat at the “whites only” counter of a Woolworth store, came back on Feb. 2, 1960, with two others — Billy Smith and Clarence Henderson. Courtesy Jack Moebes/Greensboro News & Record

Franklin McCain, one of the “Greensboro Four” who in 1960 sat down at a whites-only lunch counter in North Carolina and launched a sit-in movement that would soon spread to cities across the nation,has died.

North Carolina A&T State University said Friday morning that McCain died Thursday 9th January “after a brief illness at Moses Cone Hospital in Greensboro.”

As the Winston-Salem Journal reminds its readers, “McCain was joined by Joseph McNeil, Ezell Blair Jr. (later known as Jibreel Khazan) and David Richmond” at a Woolworth’s lunch counter in Greensboro on Feb. 1, 1960. They were there “to protest the chain’s policy of refusing to serve food to blacks.”

All four were freshmen at North Carolina A&T.
“The building,” the Journal notes, “is now the site of the International Civil Rights Center & Museum. The street south of the site has been named February One Place in commemoration of the event. A portion of the lunch counter where they sat is on exhibit at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History in Washington, D.C.”
On its webpage about that counter, the Smithsonian writes that:

“On February 1, 1960, four African American college students sat down at a lunch counter at Woolworth’s in Greensboro, North Carolina, and politely asked for service. Their request was refused. When asked to leave, they remained in their seats. Their passive resistance and peaceful sit-down demand helped ignite a youth-led movement to challenge racial inequality throughout the South.”
McCain once told NPR, as WUNC says, about how he overcame any fear about being arrested — or having something worse happen:

“I certainly wasn’t afraid. And I wasn’t afraid because I was too angry to be afraid. If I were lucky I would be carted off to jail for a long, long time. And if I were not so lucky, then I would be going back to my campus, in a pine box.”
In it remembrance of McCain, the station adds this account of the historic day in 1960:

“McCain and his classmates walked into the store, purchased some items and then walked over to the segregated counter. McCain recalls:
” ‘Fifteen seconds after I sat on that stool, I had the most wonderful feeling. I had a feeling of liberation, restored manhood; I had a natural high. And I truly felt almost invincible.’
“He hadn’t even asked for service. When McCain and the others did, they were denied. A manager told them they weren’t welcome, a police officer patted his hand with his night stick. The tension grew but it never turned violent.
“As McCain and the others continued to sit at the counter, an older white woman who had been observing the scene walked up behind him:
” ‘And she whispered in a calm voice, boys, I’m so proud of you.’
“McCain says he was stunned:
” ‘What I learned from that little incident was don’t you ever, ever stereotype anybody in this life until you at least experience them and have the opportunity to talk to them.”
“Woolworth’s closed early and the four men returned to campus with empty stomachs and no idea about what they had just started. The next day another 20 students joined them and 300 came out by the end of the week. Word of the sit-ins spread by newspapers and demonstrations began in Winston-Salem, Durham, Asheville and Wilmington; within 2 months of the initial sit-in, 54 cities in nine different states had movements of their own.
“The Greensboro lunch counter desegregated six months later.”

The Observer says that “McCain went on to graduate from N.C. A&T with degrees in chemistry and biology and worked for nearly 35 years as a chemist and sales representative at the Celanese Corporation in Charlotte. … He also remained active in civil rights efforts.”
source :NRP

6 COMMENTS

  1. Remarkable story ! “I certainly wasn’t afraid. And I wasn’t afraid because I was too angry to be afraid”
    This is the same anger freedom fighters like Kenneth Kaunda had.Young people of today what are you doing? The old generation has lived already ,the future is yours and you will determine what kind of a future that will be.

  2. When a mind is polluted u have no values and principles.U are a shifting sand.U become a lier,slandarer nd hater ,full of blame games and unneccessary complaints.That mind cannot engage in noble courses that demand sacrifice.Many of our youth cn’t

  3. Notwithstanding,this should not be used to take advantege of them by anyone,either both politicians in the ruling party or in the opposition or indeed any organisation or individuals.We need a very strong foundation for our youth that can pro……

  4. vide room for a pipo that have a strong will.Only then shall we have a pipo of strong character like the deceased(Mhsrip),the kk,the Mandelas,Nkhulumas,Nyaleles,Lumumbas and many more.RIP sir!

  5. Well done ba LT for bringing an empowering piece of History like this, particularly for our young people in Zambia. It builds a good and strong self-esteem in a person to stand up for what is right and not what he/she is told by an old washed up politician. As the saying goes “Stand up for what you believe in, because you can fall for anything”. Your time has come, do the right thing and support good ideologies as these boys in 1960 did, and NOT individual politicians for the sake of supporting, even when they go wrong, as is the case now in Zambia. Your time has come.

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