by David Lisker - 2001 ©
In 1961, the Freedom Riders, a dedicated group of
men and women, black and white, young and old (many from university
and college campuses) across the country boarded buses, trains and
planes bound for the deep South to challenge that regions
outdated Jim Crow laws and the non-compliance with a US Supreme
Court decision already three years old that prohibited segregation
in all interstate public transportation facilities.
The First Freedom Riders
The first Freedom Riders were members of the Nashville
Student Group, a local group of students who had successfully desegregated
the lunch counters and movie theaters in that city. Emboldened by
their victory, the Freedom Riders decided to introduce their strategies
of non-violence throughout the South in order to directly challenge
the regions Jim Crow laws.
Trained in Non-Violence
For this they were well prepared as they were trained
in the discipline of non-violence by no less a figure than Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. himself. King's brilliant leadership during the
Montgomery Bus Boycott had brought an end to that citys policies
of segregation on its local bus line and catapulted the young Reverend
to international fame. Also, Reverend James Lawson, whose studies
of Mahatma Gandhi in India so impressed Dr. King that he urged the
elder Reverend to leave immediately for Nashville to teach the message
of non-violence to the Nashville Student Group. (See David Halberstams
excellent book, The Children for an account of the early
days of the group and their lives since.)
The Last Supper
On May 4th, 1961 the night before they were to leave
on the first Freedom Ride, the Freedom Riders and the architects
of the Ride met. Present at the dinner were Dianne Nash, the striking
young spokeswoman of the group who was considered too valuable a
figure to go on the Rides herself and would instead coordinate efforts
back in Nashville; and James Lawson, the mentor of the Freedom Riders
in the art of non-violence.
At a Chinese restaurant in Washington, DC, John
Lewis, a young man from rural Georgia and theology student at the
American Baptist College in Nashville sat in awe at the scene before
him, partly out of fear at what lay ahead for them all and partly
for the fact that it was the first time in his life that had ever
seen Chinese food. While he greatly enjoyed the evenings meal
that night, John Lewis (now a US Congressman from his home state
of Georgia) would later liken it to the last supper.
Other Freedom Riders in attendance that evening included Marion
Barry, James Bevel, Hank Thomas, James Peck, Ed Blankenheim, B.
Elton Cox, Bernard Lafayette and Jim Zwerg.
The Freedom Rides Begin
The next morning the Freedom Rides boarded the buses
and took their places, blacks and whites seated together on the
bus, an act already considered a crime in most segregated states.
At stops along the way, the Freedom Riders entered whites
and colored areas contrary to where they were supposed
to go and ate together at segregated lunch counters. They met little
resistance along the way until Rockville, S.C. where an angry mob
beat the Freedom Riders as they pulled into the station. This was
the first of many such beatings the Freedom Riders were to receive
at the hands of angry mobs.
Undaunted by the beatings. the Freedom Riders continued
on their journey until Mothers Day, May, 14th, 1961 when they
were met by an angry mob (dressed in their Sunday finest as if theyd
just come from church) in Anniston, Alabama. Due to the ferocity
of the mob, the bus decided not to stop at the station and it quickly
left, already wounded by the mob who had slashed the buss
tires at the station. A few miles outside of Anniston the tires
began to deflate and the bus was forced to pull over. As the bus
driver fled in glee, a mob of men who had been following the bus
got out of their cars and surrounded the stricken bus. From somewhere
in the crowd a firebomb was thrown inside the bus and exploded.
As the Freedom Riders tried to escape the smoke and flames they
found they could not as the exit doors were blocked by the surging
mob. Just then one of the gas tanks exploded on the bus and the
mob rushed back allowing the Freedom Riders to push the doors open
and escape. As they exited the burning bus, the Freedom Riders rushed
outside still choking from the thick smoke and were beaten by the
waiting vigilantes. As lead pipes and baseball bats were swung,
only an onboard undercover agent prevented the Freedom Riders from
being lynched that day as he fired his gun into the air. Later that
same day the Freedom Riders were beaten a second time as they arrived
in Birmingham, Alabama.
Calls To Halt The Freedom Rides
While older, more conservative Civil Rights organizations
urged Dianne Nash and the Nashville Students to halt the Freedom
Rides, the brave and determined young group leader steadfastly refused
and instead put out a call to CORE, (the Committee of Racial Equality;
SNCC (the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee); and the SCLC
(the Southern Christian Leadership Conference) headed by Dr. King
to bring even more Freedom Riders on board.
JFK Responds
Alarmed by the violence, President Kennedy dispatched
his brother, then Attorney General Robert Kennedy to strike a deal
with the state officials from Mississippi to ensure that the Freedom
Riders would have safe passage to Jackson. In exchange for their
safe passage (the National Guard would escort the Freedom Riders
into the state), the Freedom Riders would be arrested on their arrival
in Jackson.
Mass Arrests
Soon, the local jails in Jackson were filled to
capacity. Over 350 of the Freedom Riders were placed behind bars
and given a six-month sentence for breach of peace violations.
Rather than posting bail immediately however, the Freedom Riders
chose to remain in jail for forty days, the maximum amount of time
one could remain in jail before losing their right of appeal. As
the local jails filled up, many of the Freedom Riders were transferred
to the newly built maximum-security facility at Parchman Farm located
140 miles outside of Jackson.
At Parchman Farm
At Parchman the conditions worsened. Men and women
prisoners were segregated from each other by race and sex. The female
population was housed in the death row wing of the prison and never
allowed to go outside and mingle with the general population. Women
in particular were subject to humiliating body searches and allowed
no time for exercise.
The Freedom Riders responded to their harsh treatment
by singing freedom songs from their cells. (One Freedom Rider was
actually a bass singer with the San Francisco Opera.) When the guards
demanded they stop their singing, the Freedom Riders refused. As
punishment for their insolence, the guards took away their blankets.
Nights were cold, recalls one Freedom Rider as they
were forced to sleep on the cold, hard steel floor.
Scattered hunger strikes further weakened many of the Freedom Riders
physically but did not dampen their moral resolve.
Carrying On The Struggle
Upon their release from jail, the Freedom Riders
continued their efforts to end segregation in all walks of life
in the South. A second grassroots movement called Freedom
Highways followed that was a precursor to the Freedom
Summer project in 1964-1965 when thousands of student volunteers
came to the South to work on voter registration, school and housing
issues in the black community.
Epilogue
Five months after the first Freedom Rides left on
their historic ride the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) in
conjunction with the US Attorney General Robert Kennedy issued a
tough new Federal order banning segregation at all interstate public
facilities based on race, color or creed. The law became
effective on November 1st, 1961.
Tribute
This Veterans Day, people from throughout
the country will gather in Jackson, Mississippi to pay tribute to
these brave American sons and daughters whose selfless act of courage
helped pave the way for others to continue on the road to Civil
Rights in America. And to pass on that legacy to future generations
of Freedom Riders committed to building a better world of tomorrow
today.
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