| South Carolina | |
|---|---|
| Part of theCivil Rights Movement | |
| Date | 1954–1968[a] |
| Location | South Carolina, United States |
| Caused by | Racial segregation in schools and public accommodations |
| Resulted in |
|
Part ofa series on the | ||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| History ofSouth Carolina | ||||||||||||||
| Timeline | ||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||
Prior to thecivil rights movement in South Carolina, African Americans in the state had very few political rights.South Carolina briefly had a majority-black government during theReconstruction era after theCivil War, but with the 1876 inauguration of GovernorWade Hampton III, aDemocrat who supported the disenfranchisement of blacks,African Americans in South Carolina struggled to exercise their rights. Poll taxes, literacy tests, and intimidation kept African Americans from voting, and it was virtually impossible for someone to challenge the Democratic Party, which ran unopposed in most state elections for decades. By 1940, the voter registration provisions written into the 1895 constitution effectively limited African-American voters to 3,000—only 0.8 percent of those of voting age in the state.[1]
Jim Crow laws, legalized by theSupreme Court casePlessy v. Ferguson (1896), created a district color line acrossthe South. African Americans were prohibited from using the same facilities as white Americans, and African-American children were prohibited from attending white schools; schools meant for colored children were typical of lower quality than white schools. Public segregation and voting restrictions were eventually reversed after the events of the civil rights movement in South Carolina and the United States during the 1950s and the 1960s.
The passage of theThirteenth,Fourteenth, andFifteenth amendments to the United States Constitution in the years following theCivil War provided for the enfranchisement of African Americans in South Carolina. During theReconstruction era, South Carolinians elected a majority-black legislature. Additionally, several African Americans were elected to other higher offices, includingRobert Smalls andRichard H. Cain to theU.S. House of Representatives,Alonzo J. Ransier andRichard Howell Gleaves aslieutenant governor, andFrancis Lewis Cardozo as South Carolina's secretary of state. Largely, African Americans were free to vote during this period. However, as part of theCompromise of 1877, PresidentRutherford B. Hayes removed the military occupation of the South, which allowed formerConfederates and white supremacists to take power in South Carolina.[2]
During the1876 gubernatorial election, African Americans were largely prevented from voting. Consequently, the incumbent Republican governor,Daniel Henry Chamberlain, lost reelection andDemocratWade Hampton III took office. Chamberlain refused to leave office, claiming that the election was invalid because ofAfrican Americans' voting rights having been trampled. For a brief period, two governments were formed, but theSouth Carolina Supreme Court ruled Hampton to be the lawful governor.[3] Over the next decades, African Americans were kept from voting through literacy tests, poll taxes, and intimidation. The Democrat's retaking of power in 1876 allowed for the rise of theKu Klux Klan, which sought to terrorize African Americans throughlynchings and fear. ThePlessy v. Ferguson (1896) Supreme Court decision further allowed for the legality of segregation in public facilities and schools that extended into the 1960s.

In 1944,George Stinney, a 14-year-old black youth, was accused of murdering two white girls, aged 11 and 8, nearAlcolu inClarendon County, South Carolina. Stinney was interrogated by police in a locked room with several white officers and no other witnesses, and it was asserted that he had confessed to the killing within an hour. Stinney's father was fired from his job at a local lumber mill, and his family had to either leave the town or risk lynching. Stinney was rapidly convicted mostly because he faced anall-white jury. Stinney's court-appointed attorney, Charles Plowden, was a tax commissioner with political aspirations, and historians have considered him to have been ineffective in counseling Stinney. On June 16, 1944, Stinney was executed at theSouth Carolina Penitentiary inColumbia. Seventy years later, historians still questioned whether he was guilty and doubted that he received a fair trial. On December 17, 2014, Stinney's conviction was overturned on the grounds that his constitutional rights had been violated, and his confession had most likely been coerced.[4][5]
In 1946,Isaac Woodard, an African-American World War II veteran, was attacked hours after being honorably discharged on a bus ride toNorth Carolina. Woodard and the bus driver argued about whether there was time to use the restroom before the bus departed. When the bus arrived inBatesburg-Leesville, the driver called the police. Woodard was forcibly removed for the bus and attacked by several white men, including the bus driver, several police officers, and Sheriff Lynwood Shull. Woodard was beaten withnightsticks and had his eyes gouged out. Woodard was left permanently blind. The incident sparked national outrage, encouraging PresidentHarry S. Truman to order a federal investigation. The sheriff was indicted and went to trial in a federal court, but he was acquitted by an all-white jury.[6]
Such miscarriages of justice against African Americans, coupled with unfair discrimination laws, influenced South Carolina and the nation toward civil rights initiatives. Much of the civil rights movement in South Carolina was resolved without rioting or violence. African-American protesters were often arrested and sometimes mistreated by police, but protesters typically remained peaceful and nonviolent. Much of the national spotlight during the civil rights movement was focused onAlabama andMississippi.


In 1951, GovernorJames F. Byrnes, supporting the "separate but equal" doctrine required by thePlessy v. Ferguson (1896) decision, proposed a three percent sales tax increase to fund black schools. Byrnes sought to improve black schools to prevent desegregation,[7] and these school improvements were often colloquially regarded to as "equalization schools". In 1952, theUnited States District Court for the District of South Carolina heard theBriggs v. Elliott case, which argued that unequal schools caused by segregation inSummerton violated African-American children'sFourteenth Amendment right to equal protection under the law. The court ultimately ruled that unequal schools were unconstitutional, but stopped short of requiring schools to integrate. The court in the case ofBriggs v. Elliot delivered a verdict that was almost identical toPlessy v. Ferguson in that it provided for legalized segregated facilities based on race so long as the separate facilities were equal. The families of the African-American children in Summerton appealed, andBriggs v. Elliot was the first of five cases to be combined intoBrown v. Board of Education (1954), which required the desegregation of schools nationwide. By 1964, South Carolina's 37 Roman Catholic schools desegregated.[8] Desegregation of public schools began in August 1964, though some schools were still segregated into the early 1970s.
Charleston County School District began desegregating in 1963 and was among the earliest to integrate, though the district was still largely segregated. While the district was no longer legally segregated, only 11 black students attended a white school in the first year. The district did not integrate on a large scale until the early 1970s.[9][10]
Many pro-segregationists supportedsegregation academies. Between 1963 and 1975, in an extension ofwhite flight, over 200 of these academies were established to keep schools all-white. In 1978, private school enrollment reached a peak of 50,000. InClarendon County, for example, the private academy Clarendon Hall was established in late 1965 after four black students enrolled in a previously all-white public school. By 1969, only 281 white students were left in the public school system, and only 16 white students were in public schools when they officially desegregated a year later.[11][12]

In January 1963,Harvey Gantt became the first black student to attendClemson University by order of Federal District JudgeCharles Cecil Wyche. On May 20, 1963, over 1,000 students at theUniversity of South Carolina protested integration. They marched to theState House chanting "We don't want to integrate". On the campus'Horseshoe, across was burned in opposition to the enrollment of African-American students.[13] In September 1963, the University of South Carolina admitted three African-American students by court order: Robert G. Anderson, Henrie Monteith Treadwell and James L. Solomon Jr.[14] Both Clemson and South Carolina desegregated without much resistance.
TheCollege of Charleston refused to abide by the provision of theCivil Rights Act of 1964 and continued to refuse to enroll in African-American students. In July 1965, theDepartment of Health, Education, and Welfare revoked the ability of students at the college to receive federal loans as long as the college was not integrated. In 1967, the College of Charleston enrolled its first black students.[15]
Beginning in February 1960, students atAllen University andBenedict College, two colleges in Columbia, began planning protests against segregation laws. On March 2, approximately fifty students from the two schools participated inlunch counter sit-ins, forcing the businesses to close for the day. The following day, five hundred students gathered to protest, two hundred of whom marched to the city center and the State House. On March 4, several white men burned a cross on the property of Allen University and threw bricks at one of the school buildings in retaliation to the protests. Some black students retorted by breaking car windows at a white drive-in restaurant, an event which the leaders of the student protests condemned. In response, the Mayor of Columbia announced that any person caught protesting would be arrested.[16] Students from Allen and Benedict often met at campus locations or in nearbyblack churches. Students created flyers and other forms of advertisement to gather support for the civil rights cause.[17]
On March 5, students fromClaflin University andSouth Carolina State University, two colleges inOrangeburg, formed the South Carolina Student Movement Association (SCSM). The association's goal was to create collaboration among all South Carolina black schools to bring about integration by protesting stores and businesses with discriminatory policies. On March 15, the SCSM held simultaneous protests in Orangeburg, Columbia, andRock Hill, resulting in the arrest of 11 students in Columbia. In Orangeburg, approximately 1,000 students nonviolently protested in the business district, resulting in the arrests of 388 students. Police used fire hoses and tear gas to halt the protest, but the students refused to act violently. Not having enough room in the county jail, some jailed students were house in stockades originally built for cattle; they were subjected to 40-degree rainy weather.[18]
Throughout the summer, the SCSM organized small-scale protests but had difficulty organizing large events. ReverendIsaiah DeQuincey Newman led a group of protesters on a four-mile march to theColumbia municipal airport to protest segregated waiting rooms. A few days later, he led students on a march toSesquicentennial State Park to protest the all-white policy of the park.[8] On October 15, students at Allen University and Benedict College formed the Student Committee for Human Rights to facilitate citywide organization. On March 2, 1961, exactly one year after the initial protest in Columbia, theGreenville chapter of theNAACP organized a large-scale protest at the South Carolina State House. Over 200 students protested nonviolently and sang religious hymns. State police ordered the protesters to leave, but students refused. 187 of the 200 were arrested and found guilty of "disturbing the peace", though this verdict was overruled in the Supreme Court caseEdwards v. South Carolina (1962).[19] Among those arrested were Reverend Newman and futureU.S. Congressman andMajority WhipJim Clyburn.[8]
On March 5, Benedict College student, Lennie Glover, was stabbed at a sit-in at F. W. Woolworth's in Columbia. In response to the stabbing, students led a protest on March 24, the week before Easter, named the "Easter Lennie Glover No Buying Campaign", which called for daily picketing and boycotting of businesses with discriminatory practices.[20] Most businesses and facilities protested by HBCU students were desegregated within four years.
From the end of theReconstruction era until the end civil rights movement, almost every business and public facility across the state was segregated both by custom and by law. For example, a business owner could be fined in the City of Greenville for serving a white and colored person at the same table. The city ordinance is cited below:
"It shall be unlawful for any person owning, managing or controlling any hotel, restaurant, cafe, eating house, boarding-house or similar establishment to furnish meals to white persons and colored persons in the same room, or at the same table, or at the same counter; provided, however, that meals may be served to white persons and colored persons in the same room where separate facilities are furnished.
Nearly every town and cities had segregation laws, ranging from daily shopping businesses and restaurants to public transportation buses, movie theaters, airports, libraries, public parks, swimming pools, restrooms, drinking fountains, and doctors' offices. In Columbia, Dr. Cyril O. Spann Sr., and other community leaders participated in strategic actions that desegregated Columbia's Main Street business district, a history documented by theDr. Cyril O Spann Medical Office.
On June 22, 1954,Sarah Mae Flemming sat in the whites-only section of a city bus inColumbia. The bus driver immediately instructed Flemming to stand and wait for a colored seat to become available. Flemming, still two miles from her destination, attempted to exit the bus at the next stop, but the driver blocked the exit and physically assaulted her. Flemming was not arrested, but she did visit the hospital because of the assault. The following week,Modjeska Monteith Simkins heard about Flemming's encounter and hired a lawyer to file a suit againstSouth Carolina Electric and Gas, the owner of the bus. In the case Flemming v. South Carolina Electric and Gas, Flemming's lawyer argued that herFourteenth Amendment rights had been violated and demanded for $25,000 in punitive damages. Lower courts ruled in the bus company's favor, but after Flemming's lawyer filed the case in a federal suit in the4th US Circuit Court of Appeals, Flemming won the suit and the court ruled the bus segregation to be unconstitutional, though the court added that bus company did not owe Flemming any money. At the time, the case received little publicity.[22][23]
In October 1959,Major League Baseball playerJackie Robinson entered the whites-only waiting room at theGreenville Municipal Airport. Airport police asked Robinson to leave, but he refused. Ultimately, the police did not force Robinson to move. At anNAACP speech inGreenville, Robinson urged "complete freedom" and encouraged black citizens to vote and to protest their second-class citizenship. The following January on New Year's Day, approximately 1,000 staged a march to the airport, which was desegregated shortly thereafter.[24][25]
In 1961, a group of nine African-American men was arrested for staging a sit-in at a segregatedMcCrory's lunch counter inRock Hill. The group gained national attention and sparked many other sit-ins across the nation. A major goal of these "Jail, No Bail" protests was to strain the prison system and force integration. The group became known as the "Friendship Nine" because they were students atFriendship College.

Public libraries inColumbia andSpartanburg desegregated without controversy. InGreenville, however, on July 16, 1960, eight African-American students protested the segregation practices of theGreenville County public library. The county library had white-only and colored-only branches. The colored branch was a one-room house that had fewer books than the white-only branch. The students entered the white branch of the library. Some selected a book and sat down to read while others browsed the shelves. Several white patrons left the library. The librarian asked the students to leave, but they remain silent and refused to move. When the police arrived, the eight students were arrested, then released on a $30 bond. On July 28, Donald J. Sampson, the students' lawyer, filed a suit against the library system. On September 2, the mayor and the city council instructed the library to close to avoid forced integration. Greenville Mayor J. Kenneth Cass said, "The efforts being made by a few Negroes to use the White library will now deprive all White and Negro citizens of the benefit of a library." Public pressure encouraged Cass to reopen the library system, but he refused to integrate the facility, stating libraries "will not be used for demonstrations, purposeless assembly, or propaganda purposes." But the library desegregated short thereafter, and the charges against the eight students were dropped.[26]
In 1962, ten African-American petitioners inGreenville entered and seated themselves at a lunch counter reserved for whites. The manager called for police, and when the protesters refused to move, they were arrested and taken to the police headquarters. The ten protesters were charged with "trespassing". The case was heard in theSupreme CourtPeterson v. City of Greenville (1962). The court ruled in favor of the protesters, stating that the city's segregation law was a violation of theirFourteenth Amendment right.[21]
On February 8, 1968, inOrangeburg, threeSouth Carolina State University students were killed and dozens wounded after 200 students protested racial segregation at a local bowling alley. The students were fired upon byhighway patrolmen in an event that became known as the Orangeburg massacre. In response to the shooting, South Carolina State University students protested at the State House in March.
The U.S. District Court caseBrown v. South Carolina State Forestry Commission (1963) ruled that all public parks must desegregate. Instead, theForestry Commission closed all parks, refusing to open. Parks reopened on a restricted basis in June 1964, nearly a year later, then fully in July 1964.[8][27] In December 1963, five movie theaters in Columbia agreed to admit one black couple daily, announcing they would fully desegregate by the end of January 1964. In the winter of 1961, eight black men and women were arrested for attempting to use an all-white skating rink and swimming pool in Greenville'sCleveland Park. In 1962, a federal court ruled that the segregation of the park facilities was unconstitutional. Rather than integrating, the city closed the park and the rink permanently; the pool was converted into a "Marineland" with three sea lions.[28] In 1973, theSouth Carolina State Fair fully integrated.

In 1964, Piggie Park Enterprises, also known as Maurice's BBQ, denied an African American woman access to the restaurant. Her lawyer,Matthew J. Perry, filed a suit against the business, citing a violation of the newly enactedCivil Rights Act of 1964. The restaurant's owner,Maurice Bessinger, argued that restaurant was not a public accommodation was therefore not subject to the legislation. Bessinger, a Baptist, believed God created whites to be superior to blacks, and that "his religious beliefs compel him to oppose any integration of the races whatever."[29] In the caseNewman v. Piggie Park Enterprises, Inc., a lower court ruled in favor of Bessinger, but theCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit reversed the decision; Bessinger appealed to theSupreme Court. The Supreme Court ruled 8–0 that Bessinger had violated the civil rights of the black customer and that he was not entitled to be compensated for the money he spent on the appeal to the Supreme Court.[30]
On March 17, 1969, a group of 300 African-American women healthcare workers at theMedical University of South Carolina inCharleston protested unequal pay and unsafe working conditions.Coretta Scott King, the widowed wife ofMartin Luther King Jr., was among the protesting women, and this was theSouthern Christian Leadership Conference's first major campaign sinceKing's assassination.[31] Several women took control of the hospital president's office while singing hymns and chanting. Most women returned to their jobs once Police Chief John Conroy threatened to arrest the protesters, but twelve women were fired for abandoning their patients.[32] After the firing of the twelve women, many more employees, predominantly women, went on strike. The strike lasted over 100 days, and in late April,National Guard troops with tanks, gas masks, and bayonet-fixed rifles arrive to confront the healthcare workers. The strike ended, without violence, in June with a settlement.[33]
In 1956, U.S. SenatorStrom Thurmond of South Carolina authored theSouthern Manifesto, which denounced the 1954Brown v. Board decision as "unwarranted" and referred to anti-segregationists as "agitators and troublemakers invading our States".[34] Many schools and districts, consequentially, refused to integrate as mandated by the Supreme Court. The manifesto encouraged white flight, school choice, and the voluntary closing of public schools. GovernorFritz Hollings (1959–1963), initially opposed integration but reversed his position midway through his gubernatorial term. Hollings advocated for school integration "with dignity", and he stated that the age of segregation had passed. Hollings was the first governor of South Carolina to support integration since theReconstruction era in the 1870s.[35][36]

In 1962, theSouth Carolina General Assembly voted to display theVirginia battle flag on top of theState House dome. The flag flew on the dome until 2000, where it was moved to a monument on the capitol grounds. The flag was removed from the grounds in 2015 after theCharleston church shooting.[37]
After the passage of the federalVoting Rights Act of 1965, the state of South Carolina argued that the act was unconstitutional and that states reserved the right to regulate and control elections. In the Supreme Court decision ofSouth Carolina v. Katzenbach (1966), JusticeEarl Warren authored in the majority opinion that preventing racial discrimination was a "legitimate response" of Congress and that South Carolina's intentions were generated from "insidious and pervasive evil".[38]

In 1967 Sterling High School, an all-black school inGreenville, was destroyed by fire. Many believed that the fire was intentional, especially since the same week the school had approved for renovations, but this claim was never proven. Throughout the early 1960s, students at Sterling protested unequal treatment in Greenville, especially at F. W. Woolworth's, through nonviolent protests and sit-ins. In 2006 a memorial to these students was constructed in Greenville on the location of the former Woolworth's.[39][40]
On January 25, 1972, the Springfield Baptist Church in Greenville, a black church, was burned in opposition to African-American equality. The church, founded by former slaves in 1867, was one of few places African Americans could safely visit during the era ofJim Crow. The church had been a site for many speakers and leaders, includingMartin Luther King Jr. andJesse Jackson. The church had been a location for manyNAACP meetings during the civil rights movement, and it had been where many peaceful protests were planned, including the New Year's Day March that resulted in the desegregation of Greenville's Downtown Airport.[41]
On April 17, 1963,Malcolm X delivered a speech at a mosque in Columbia, denouncing the political leaders.[42] On April 25, 1963,U.S. Attorney GeneralRobert F. Kennedy, brother to PresidentJohn F. Kennedy, spoke at theUniversity of South Carolina, stating that "the practical needs of the world today would compel our national government...to do everything possible to eliminate racial discrimination."[43] In 1967, Martin Luther King Jr. gave a speech in Charleston where he encouraged African Americans to vote and protest racial inequality.
Notable leaders include:
The passage of the federalVoting Rights Act of 1965 led to the creation of the Legislative Black Caucus in the South Carolina legislature. For the first time since theReconstruction era, African Americans were elected to statewide political offices in South Carolina. As of 2020, 44 of 172 members of theSouth Carolina General Assembly were African American, accounting for about 26%.[44]