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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsHidden Herstory: The Leesburg Stockade Girls
You may ask, Who were the Leesburg Stockade Girls? In July of 1963 in Americus, Georgia, fifteen girls were jailed for challenging segregation laws. Ages 12 to 15, these girls had marched from Friendship Baptist Church to the Martin Theater on Forsyth Street. Instead of forming a line to enter from the back alley as was customary, the marchers attempted to purchase tickets at the front entrance. Law enforcement soon arrived and viciously attacked and arrested the girls. Never formally charged, they were jailed in squalid conditions for forty-five days in the Leesburg Stockade, a Civil War era structure situated in the back woods of Leesburg, Georgia. Only twenty miles away, parents had no knowledge of where authorities were holding their children. Nor were parents aware of their inhumane treatment.
A month into their confinement, Danny Lyon, a twenty-one year old photographer for the Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), learned of the girls whereabouts and sneaked onto the stockade grounds to take pictures of the girls through barred windows. After SNCC published the photos in its newspaper The Student Voice, African American newspapers across the country printed the story, and the girls ordeal soon gained national attention.
On August 28, 1963, as Martin Luther King Jr. gave his historic I Have a Dream speech in Washington, DC, these children sat in their cell bolstering their courage with freedom songs in solidarity with the thousands of marchers listening to Dr. Kings indelible speech on the National Mall. Soon after the March on Washington, during the same week of the bombing of the five little girls at Sixteenth Street Baptist Church on September 15, 1963, law enforcement released the Leesburg Stockade Girls and returned them to their families.
Their story was part of the broader Civil Rights effort that engaged children in a variety of nonviolent, direct actions. In Alabama, for example, thousands of youth participated in the 1963 Childrens Crusade, a controversial liberation tactic initiated by James Bevel of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) and led by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. After careful deliberation about the merit of involving children in street protests and allowing them to be jailed, Dr. King decided that their participation would revive the waning desegregation campaign and would appeal to the moral conscience of the nation....continued at link
https://nmaahc.si.edu/blog-post/hidden-herstory-leesburg-stockade-girls?fbclid=IwAR2OADjaqnO0GrSGbSODdVaMrMs3TYozbQBMRVlw1dhzuCj2NLhm5e8tOUs
DBoon
(22,369 posts)Replacing a confederate general or politician
Me.
(35,454 posts)I like the one beneath it too, young girls in pedal pushers. How innocent!
secondwind
(16,903 posts)I hope this happens after Biden is elected.
Sherman A1
(38,958 posts)Several years ago. Very impressive young ladies.
Thank you for sharing this! I love the first photo of the girls in the stockade. A horrible thing had happened to them, yet they all still look so sweet and innocent, with smiles on their faces. It's a very hopeful picture. Like they knew that they were just a part of a larger movement and this one setback wasn't going to break them.
Me.
(35,454 posts)as I mentioned before, the pedal pushers do it for me. Summer, carefree days...but not for them
Me.
(35,454 posts)am going to try to keep this going in case some who might be interested, see it
Ferrets are Cool
(21,107 posts)panader0
(25,816 posts)GeoWilliam750
(2,522 posts)I had not heard of this.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leesburg_Stockade
They were charged for their use of the facility, and at one point a rattlesnake was thrown into the cells.
Me.
(35,454 posts)"at one point a rattlesnake was thrown into the cells"