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Chapter Twelve
The Emergence Of Diversity:
African Americans
Dr. Dan L. Morrill
University of North Carolina at
Charlotte
E-mail comments to
N4JFJ@aol.com
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An African American stands in front
of the monument commemorating the Mecklenburg
Declaration of Independence. Jim Crow and the
declaration's promise were irreconcilable. |
The
significance of the creation of the University of North Carolina
at Charlotte , the concurrent rise of female influence on local
elected governmental bodies, and the enactment of district
representation notwithstanding, it was the persistent struggle
of African Americans to gain the full rights of citizenship that
occupied center stage in Charlotte-Mecklenburg during the years
of social transformation that followed World War Two. The black
veterans who returned to Charlotte in 1945 found the rules of
racial segregation demeaning and repugnant. "It was very
upsetting to realize you have given precious time of your life
for supposed freedom in a country that was still segregated,"
said Charlottean Gerson Stroud . Raymond Rorie , a school
principal, agreed. "This was one of the problems we black
soldiers faced," he declared. "We were protecting our country
when we didn't have freedom ourselves." Jim Crow was about to
enter its last days in Charlotte-Mecklenburg. There were three
main players in this compelling drama -- two blacks and one
white. They were Fred D. Alexander , Julius Chambers , and
Mayor Stan Brookshire .
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Fred Alexander Being Sworn In As
Member Of The Charlotte City Council. Milton Short is
in the middle. |
In 1965,
Fred D. Alexander became the first African American elected to
the Charlotte City Council and the first black to hold elected
public office in Mecklenburg County since the 1890s. He served
for nine years. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting
Rights Act of 1965 had put the full weight of the Federal
government on the side of equal access for all citizens to
public accommodations and the voting booth. “Alexander
personified a new age in which blacks took advantage of the
opportunities" offered by Federal Civil Rights legislation,
writes historian Randy Penninger in his M. A. Thesis on
Alexander’s political career.
Frederick Douglas Alexander was named for Frederick
Douglass, the Great Emancipator of the nineteenth century. Born
in Charlotte in 1910, Alexander had a soft-spoken, diplomatic
demeanor, which assisted him in winning white support for the
improvement of the African American community. “Fred was just
simply a person who handled every kind of situation well,”
commented furniture retailer and fellow City Councilman Milton
Short . Alexander's father was Zachariah Alexander , who,
after graduating from Biddle Memorial Institute , established
Alexander Funeral Home in the Second Ward or Brooklyn
neighborhood. It was there that Fred and his brother, Kelly
Alexander , who would eventually become State president of the
NAACP, learned the social skills and sensitivities to other
people’s feelings that would serve the two Alexander brothers
well in their respective public careers.
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Fred Alexander |
Even before Fred Alexander graduated from Lincoln
University in Chester County, Pennsylvania in 1931, he had
decided that access to the ballot box was the only way that
black Charlotteans could improve their lot. He was asked by a
classmate to go with him to Africa to work for the liberation of
its native people. “My God,” Alexander remembered saying many
years later, “I Came from Africa, and If I can go there
to help free HIS people, I can go back home and help
free my OWN Africa.” Alexander carried through with his
promise. “Fred came back to Charlotte with one thing in mind
-- political action,” said noted local author and newspaperman
Harry Golden .
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Harry Golden, publisher of the
Carolina Israelite, was a prominent Civil Rights
advocate in the 1950s and 1960s. |
Beginning in the 1930s, Fred Alexander devoted great
amounts of time to registering African Americans to vote. New
Deal programs assisted him in this endeavor. “Constantly
working for increased political awareness of blacks, Alexander
lobbied for the appointment of black police officers and mail
carriers, for business courses in the black high schools, and
for improved health care,” writes historian Randy Penninger.
Alexander was a founding member and executive secretary of the
Citizens’ Committee for Political Action , an organization
established in 1932 to increase political participation by
African Americans. In 1949, the group sponsored two
candidates for public office. Bishop Dale , a lanky Texan who
operated an insurance and real estate business in Second Ward,
ran unsuccessfully for City Council; and James Wertz , pastor of
St. Paul’s Baptist Church on East Second Street, failed in his
bid for a seat on the Charlotte City School Board. Their
defeats were virtually guaranteed, because an at-large voting
and representation system for municipal offices had been
instituted after Dale had almost won a seat on City Council in
1934.
Happily for Fred Alexander and other aspiring African
Americans, the political culture of Charlotte began to change
after 1950, largely because of voluntary integration of public
facilities and businesses in Charlotte in 1963, the passage of
the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and the Voting Rights Act of 1965,
and, most importantly, the successful integration, albeit
limited, of the local public schools in 1957. It was during the
1950s and 1960s, sometimes called America's "Second Civil War,"
that the White Supremacy initiatives of the 1890s began to give
way to new arrangements, both politically and socially. These
years, writes Jack Claiborne in his history of the Charlotte
Observer , were a "time of upheaval."
Fred Alexander carefully built the political base from
which he would launch his campaign for City Council. "There has
been no Negro in public office in my lifetime," he proclaimed.
"If there had been, we would have seen a different type of
community human relations." Knowing that he would have to win a
city-wide race, Alexander sought appointments to high profile
institutions so he could become better known in the white
community. He became the first African American member of the
Charlotte Chamber of Commerce in 1962 and of the Mecklenburg
County Board of Public Welfare in 1963. He was picked to serve
on the Mayor's Community Relations Committee and became a member
of the Executive Committee of the Mecklenburg County Democrat
Party in 1964.
Fred Douglas Alexander announced his candidacy for the
Charlotte City Council on February 4, 1965. "Alexander stresses
his desire not to be considered ‘the Negro candidate,’ but
rather as a man who will work for the good of the entire
community,” proclaimed the Charlotte Observer on April
24, 1965. He told reporters that it was "necessary for somebody
to interpret the needs of a third of our population." Although
regarded by some blacks as overly cautious, especially by
outspoken Civil Rights advocate Dr. Reginald Hawkins , Alexander
received an outpouring of support from the African American
precincts and was able to garner just enough white support to
win the last contested seat. On May 11, 1965, Fred Alexander
took the oath of office as the first black City Councilman in
twentieth century Charlotte.
Alexander sought from the outset of his tenure on the
Charlotte City Council to increase the voice of the black
community in public affairs by having African Americans
appointed to governmental boards and commissions, including the
Welfare Board, the Civil Service Board, and the Urban
Redevelopment Commission. “Alexander believed black
representation on boards and commissions was necessary,” writes
Randy Penninger. As the lone African American member, Alexander
met with little success. He did take a leadership role in
bringing urban renewal to the Greenville neighborhood and in
advocating programs to provide low income housing throughout the
city. “I feel the strain upon the housing needs of the City of
Charlotte, especially as the condition exists among our Negro
citizens,” Alexander declared on September 18, 1967.
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Fred Alexander Watches Fence
Separating Elmwood And Pinewood Cemeteries Being Removed
On January 7, 1969. |
Alexander's most significant victory during his years of
service on the Charlotte City Council was the removal of a fence
that separated Elmwood Cemetery and Pinewood Cemetery , the
former for whites and the latter for blacks. “It’s cheaper to
take it down than to maintain it. Plus the insult that comes
with it,” said Alexander on April 30, 1968. There was
opposition in the white community. “To me it seems the colored
people are acting just like some children—wanting everything
they can get,” said one woman. The fence did finally come
down. City Council voted on January 6, 1969, to remove this
galling vestige of Charlotte’s Jim Crow past.
The greatest challenge to the continuation of the status
quo in Charlotte and Mecklenburg County in the years following
World War Two arose in the area of public education. On
September 4, 1957, the local public schools became racially
integrated for the first time in their history. With the
backing of School Superintendent Elmer Garinger , Dorothy Counts
enrolled that day at Harding High School ; Gus Roberts entered
Central High School ; his sister, Girvaud Roberts , became a
seventh grader at Piedmont Junior High School; and Delores
Maxine Huntley matriculated at Alexander Graham Junior High
School
In this writer's opinion, the gradual abandonment of
rigid racial segregation in the 1950s and 1960s in Charlotte and
Mecklenburg County occurred essentially for the same reason that
it had been put into place in the 1890s. Jim Crow had now
become bad for business. Men like D. A. Tompkins ,
Hamilton C. Jones , and Cameron Morrison , had looked upon
Populism and black Republicanism as threats to unremitting
economic development and growth at the turn of the last
century. By the 1950s, however, the racial arrangements of the
South were becoming increasingly anachronistic, even
embarrassing, and were isolating the region from the rest of the
county and the world.
Such realizations among Charlotte's business elite allowed
Dr. Elmer Garinger , the unassuming and fatherly Superintendent
of Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools since 1949, to summon key
members of his staff to his office in July 1957 and announce
that a small number of African Americans would be assigned to
white schools that fall. "It was the right thing to do, and
despite any confusion or discomfort it might soon cause,
Charlotte, North Carolina, was going ahead with it," states Frye
Gaillard in his book, The Dream Long Deferred.
Tensions were running high between the races in September
1957. Charlotte-Mecklenburg schools were scheduled to open on
September 4th with four African American students attending
previously all-white classrooms for the first time. In May
1954, the United States Supreme Court had ruled in the landmark
case Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka that
"separate but equal" schools were inherently unequal, thereby
setting aside the legal precedents established in 1896 in
Plessy v. Ferguson . The Court “handed the South the
greatest problem of readjustment the region has had to face
since the Civil War," declared the editors of Charlotte
Observer . On December 1, 1955, Dr. Martin Luther King,
Jr. and other black activists launched the now famous boycott
of the city buses in Montgomery, Alabama. On September 2, 1957,
Arkansas Governor Orval Faubas surrounded Central High School
in Little Rock with National Guardsmen and declared the campus
off limits to white and to black students. Faubas stated in a
televised speech that night that if African American students
attempted to enter Central High, "blood would run in the
streets."
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Klansmen picket the Visulite Theater
on Elizabeth Avenue. |
It was within this emotionally-charged atmosphere that
Charlotte-Mecklenburg prepared to integrate its schools on
September 4, 1957. Robed and hooded members of the Ku Klux Klan
picketed the Visulite Theater on Elizabeth Avenue on September
1st. They were protesting the showing of the movie, "Island in
the Sun," directed by Robert Rossen and starring such notable
performers as James Mason, Joan Collins, Dorothy Dandridge, and
Harry Belafonte. The film depicted interracial romances. The
Klansmen dispersed without incident when they were ordered to do
so by Police Chief Frank Littlejohn . "A few obvious
sympathizers of the Klan parked near the theater jeered
photographers who arrived to make pictures of the pickets,"
reported the Charlotte Observer .
Even more provocative and outlandish were comments made by
a racist rabble-rouser named John Kasper He delivered an
inflammatory speech to about 300 white people who had gathered
on the steps of the Mecklenburg County Courthouse. He called
upon the white citizens of Charlotte to rise up against the
school board. "We want a heart attack, we want nervous
breakdowns, we want suicides, we want flight from persecution,"
Kasper declared. Aware that native-born evangelist Billy Graham
was scheduled to arrive from New York City the next day, Kasper
said: "Billy Graham left here a white man but he's coming back
a n….. lover." Billy Graham , a man of impeccable character
and highest standing in Charlotte and the nation as a whole,
declined to respond to such ridiculous dribble when he stepped
off the train at the Southern Railroad Station on September 2nd.
The culmination of the crisis occurred shortly after 9:30
a.m. on Wednesday September 4th at Harding High School. 15-year
old Dorothy Counts left her parents' home on Beatties Ford Road
just across from Johnson C. Smith University , where her father
taught theology. She was driven to Harding that late summer
morning by Dr. Edwin Tompkins, also a member of the Johnson C.
Smith faculty. Not since D. H. Hill and his colleagues had
charged the dormitories at Davidson College in 1854 had there
been such explosive passion on the campus of a local school.
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Dorothy Counts Walks To Harding High School. |
A crowd of upperclassmen who had registered earlier that
morning congregated in front of the school to listen to John Z. Warlick and his wife, leaders of the White Citizens Council .
"It's up to you to keep her out," shouted Mrs. Warlick. Attired
in a simple print dress with a broad bow and ribbon dangling
from her collar, Dorothy Counts walked up the sidewalk that led
to the front door. Hoots and catcalls filled the air. Dorothy
Counts remained stoical throughout this electrifying
encounter. She said nothing, even though some young whites
threw trash and rocks toward her, most landing at her feet. "I
do remember something hitting me in the back," she told a
newspaper reporter, "but I don't think they were throwing at me,
just in front and at my feet." Dorothy Counts exhibited
remarkable poise that day. When asked if any whites spat upon
her, Counts answered: "Yes. Many. A good many times, mostly
on the back."
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Mayor Brookshire was determined that
pictures such as this would never appear in the press
again. |
Dorothy Counts soon succumbed to the harassment and scorn
she experienced. "The students were pushing, shoving, spitting
in my food," she explained many years later. "But the first
time I was afraid was when I saw my brother in the car and
students broke a window." Counts withdrew from Harding High
School after attending for only four days and transferred to a
school in Pennsylvania, but the other three African Americans
who had enrolled with little or no fanfare at other schools on
September 4th remained for the entire year. Gus Roberts would
eventually graduate from Central High School. Indeed, the
contributions of Gus Roberts, Girvaud Roberts, and Delores
Huntley to the advancement of integrated schools were more
substantial, if less confrontational, than those made by
Counts. Progress, however, was slow. "Not a lot happened in
the schools for the next several years," writes Frye Gaillard.
The number of blacks attending integrated classrooms increased
but only gradually. Charlotte remained mostly a segregated
city.
The greatest legacy of the stirring events that had
transpired at Harding High School on September 4, 1957, was the
determination of Charlotte's business leaders that such events
would never happen again. Photographs of Dorothy Counts
walking demurely through a throng of screaming and spitting
students had appeared in newspapers across the United States,
including the New York Times. "Those pictures sickened
Charlotte's corporate executives," Jack Claiborne told this
writer. Thereafter, influential Charlotteans, most notably C.
A. "Pete" McKnight , editor of the Charlotte Observer
from 1954 until 1976, nurtured an atmosphere of racial
tolerance that facilitated the rise of Fred Alexander and other
moderate African Americans to positions of community-wide
influence. "We have not defied the Court, but we have made it
clear that we will make changes slowly and with due regard for
the personal feelings of our people," stated the editors of the
Charlotte Observer on May 17, 1958, the fourth
anniversary of Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka
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Mayor Brookshire |
The man who best exemplified the accommodating attitude of
Charlotte's white business elite on racial issues was Stan
Brookshire , Mayor of Charlotte from 1961 until 1969. Like Ben
Douglas a native of Iredell County, Brookshire graduated in
1927 from Trinity College, now Duke University, and in 1933
joined with his brother, Voris Brookshire , in establishing
Engineering Sales Company. In matters of economics and business
Brookshire was a typical New South booster. Expansion and
growth were at the top of his agenda. "We had a lazy city ready
to burst out at all seams, and it did, and it's still doing it
and will continue to do it," said City Councilman Jim
Whittington when commenting on Brookshire's impact on
Charlotte. Milton Short told this writer that Mayor Brookshire
assigned him the task of investigating where Charlotte could
construct new water lines -- the umbilical cords of suburban
expansion. A natty dresser, Brookshire circulated in the same
privileged venues that men like Harry Dalton had enjoyed during
World War Two. "He loved to play golf, and he enjoyed the
burnished ambience of the country club," remembered Jerry Shinn
, associate editor of the Charlotte Observer .
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The Savoy Theater on Rozzelles
Ferry Road was for blacks only. |
Brookshire "always considered himself the Chamber of Commerce 's
choice for mayor and he ran the city from that perspective,"
stated City Councilman John Thrower . Having served as
president of the Chamber of Commerce, Brookshire was recruited
to run for mayor by Charlotte's white business leaders who did
not want the more liberal Martha Evans to win. On racial
issues Brookshire was a moderate. Above all else he sought to
avoid a repeat of the embarrassing events of 1957, when
national newspapers had carried photographs of Dorothy Counts
being harassed as she entered Harding High School .
"Brookshire identified himself with Atlanta Mayor Ivan Allen, Jr
.," explains Alex Coffin. Unlike Mayor Arthur Hanes of
Birmingham, Alabama, who championed the continuation of
segregation, Brookshire, like Allen, favored peaceful
reconciliation and looked upon moderates in the African American
community like Fred Alexander as his principal allies.
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Johnson C. Smith University students
stage sit-in. |
Charlotte teetered on the edge of racial conflict in the early
1960s. There were sit-in demonstrations at eight local lunch
counters on February 9, 1960. Store managers refused to serve
the African Americans and closed down. Seven did resume
operations on an integrated basis the following July. Black
dentist and Presbyterian minister Reginald Hawkins , whom
Brookshire despised, was the most strident voice in the local
African American community. On May 20, 1963, Hawkins led
hundreds of Johnson C. Smith students on a protest march against
racial segregation in restaurants, theaters, hotels, motels, or
any other business establishment that served the general public.
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| Warner Hall, minister of Covenant
Presbyterian Church and Chairman of the Committee on
Community Relations, was a strong voice for peaceful
accommodation and racial tolerance. |
Hawkins,
a native of Beaufort, North Carolina, had a penchant for
publicity. He purposely chose the 188th anniversary of the
alleged signing of the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence
in 1775 to stage his protest. "There is no freedom as long as
all of us are not free," the tempestuous dentist and preacher
shouted. The crowd greeted his remarks with "Yeah" and "No."
"We shall not be satisfied with gradualism," Hawkins
proclaimed. "We want freedom and we want it now." As the
students began to disperse, Hawkins issued a threat to the white
leadership of Charlotte. "Any day might be D Day . . . . They
can either make this an open or democratic city or there is
going to be a long siege. They can choose which way it's going
to be."
This was
not idle talk. Mayor Brookshire knew that demonstrations were
occurring in Raleigh, Durham, and Greensboro, and that large
numbers of protestors were being arrested. "Pete" McKnight of
the Charlotte Observer telephoned Brookshire and
suggested that decisive action was needed to maintain the
peace. Brookshire agreed. He asked Ed Burnside , president of
the Chamber of Commerce , to call a meeting of the Chamber's
executive committee. These actions culminated in the Chamber of
Commerce's approving a resolution on May 23rd calling upon
businesses in the community to open their doors voluntarily to
African Americans. "May 23, 1963, could be the day leading to a
major breakthrough in human relationships for the Queen City and
the Carolinas," stated a Charlotte Observer editorial. "
. . . once the leadership of this community has set its course,
regardless of the individual problems encountered," the
newspaper continued, "it will not swerve from it until all
citizens can breathe free in the public ways." This prediction
was borne out in the weeks and months that followed. Legal
racial segregation ended voluntarily in Charlotte and
Mecklenburg County in 1963. "I positively think that this
voluntary action enabled us to avoid the violence of murder,
riots, arson, and looting, which plagued many of our cities,"
declared Brookshire shortly before his death from lung cancer in
1990.
The
struggle for full integration of the public schools was not yet
over, however. Julius Chambers , a laconic but brilliant
lawyer, often speaks in a quiet monotone that gives little
indication of the passion for racial justice that burns in the
core of his being. Born in Mt. Gilead, North Carolina, Chambers
arrived in Charlotte in July 1964 after receiving a law degree
from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, an
advanced degree from Columbia University, and serving for one
year as an intern for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund. "He
provided for blacks in Charlotte the legal brilliance that their
movement had lacked," writes Frye Gaillard. Reginald Hawkins
did not wait long to visit Chambers in the lawyer's rented
office on East Trade Street to express frustration over the
progress of integration in the public schools.
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Julius Chambers |
Dr. Reginald Hawkins |
On
January 19, 1965, Julius Chambers , acting on behalf of Vera and
Darius Swann , whose son had been assigned to all-black
Biddleville Elementary School near Johnson C. Smith University ,
filed legal briefs in Federal District Court in Charlotte.
Chambers argued that the pupil assignment plan of the
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools violated the United States
Constitution and that the School Board was obligated to take
more resolute action to eliminate the vestiges of racial
segregation that persisted in the public schools.
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| William E. Poe |
Many Charlotteans, including School Board Chairman William Poe ,
believed that this community had a sterling record with respect
to race relations and that some in the African American
community were pressing their demands for more comprehensive
school integration too assertively. "I never knew of any
occasion when he even wrote a letter," Poe stated many years
later when discussing Chambers. "He never came in and said,
'let's talk about these things.'" Such behavior frustrated
and angered Poe.
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Police Investigate Bombing. |
Anger of
a more sinister kind erupted in Charlotte during the early
morning hours of November 22, 1965. Sticks of dynamite exploded
with dramatic suddenness in the yards of the homes of Fred
Alexander , Kelly Alexander , Reginald Hawkins , and Julius
Chambers . It was as if a compressed coil of racial hatred
suddenly sprang forward. Luckily, nobody was hurt. The
perpetrators were never identified, but Mayor Brookshire and the
Charlotte City Council left no doubt as to how they felt about
this incident. "We are ashamed and horrified by the acts of
violence," read their official statement. "They have done much
damage to the four homes involved. They have done far greater
damage to our community." According to Alex Coffin, Brookshire
regarded these bombings as the "low point in his time in
office." "The despicable acts of these nightriding terrorists do
not represent the spirit of Charlotte," asserted the
Charlotte Observer . Mayor Brookshire himself would
experience the barbs of racial retaliation. A burning cross was
found in his yard on August 26, 1966.
Charlotte
experienced another round of intense racial stress in the days
following the tragic assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King,
Jr. on April 4, 1968. Cities across the country exploded in
orgies of rage, and many wondered whether the same would happen
in Charlotte. President R. P. Perry closed Johnson C. Smith
early for spring holidays "to maintain calm." Students at
Davidson College donned black armbands in honor of Dr. King, and
those at Second Ward High School wept openly during an
emotionally wrenching memorial service. Mayor Brookshire and
County Commission Chairman Jim Martin declared a city-wide day
of mourning and scheduled a memorial service for noon on April
6th at Ovens Auditorium. Dr. Warner Hall,, pastor of Covenant
Presbyterian Church and chairman of the Mayor's Committee on
Community Relations, said that the people of Charlotte needed to
come together to express a "personal sense of loss."
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Police stood at the Square in April
1968 after dark to assure that nobody was on the
streets. |
George
Leake, the passionate and physically imposing minister of Little
Rock A.M.E. Zion Church, alarmed Mayor Brookshire and other
civic leaders during a meeting of the Committee on Community
Relations on April 6th. Leake spoke with uncharacteristic
candor to representatives of the white elite. African
Americans, he said, rejected "attempts to placate the Negro
community and to soothe the conscience of whites." Leake
called upon the business community to "teach Negroes in the same
way that they teach the dumb white folks." He warned that
Charlotte could experience "long hot summers" and even "chaos"
unless it curbed the racist behavior of some policemen and
improved recreation programs in poorer neighborhoods. Blacks,
he said, would continue to fight "with the ballot, boycott,
picket and will march if that is the only way you'll answer the
call." He ended by inviting whites to come to a memorial
service on April 8th where "men of color will honor
one of their own."
This
writer attended the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial
Service held at St. Paul's Baptist Church on the evening of
April 8, 1968. It was a memorable experience. The streets were
virtually empty, because Mayor Brookshire had declared a
city-wide nightly curfew earlier that day. Black ladies in
white dresses greeted the people politely and handed out
programs at the door of the Gothic Revival style church, which
would soon fall victim to Mayor Brookshire's "slum clearance"
program for the Brooklyn neighborhood.
The
banging radiators along the walls of the packed sanctuary seemed
to underscore the significance of the moment. The audience was
about half white and half black. Mayor Brookshire was there.
County Commission Chairman Jim Martin was there. “I didn’t
believe you would come,” proclaimed Rev. Leake. “I am
encouraged that at last you did come down and share with us.”
Kelly Alexander concurred. “I’m glad to see so many people
here,” he declared. “I’m sorry it took Martin Luther King’s
death to bring us together.”
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Some of the attendees at the April 8th
Memorial Service |
Bishop Leake |
George
Leake delivered a stirring sermon. His sonorous tones
reverberated against the walls of the old sanctuary, evoking
tears and shouts of “Amen” from many in the audience. He began
in a dignified, measured manner similar to that employed by
preachers in white churches. It did not take long, however, for
the more dramatic style of the African American clergy to come
to the surface. Leake suddenly thrust his arms skyward and
began swaying from side to side in the pulpit. Perspiration
beaded on his forehead and trickled down the side of his shiny,
black face. “The Lord has gathered him up and said, ‘Martin you
have done enough. You have walked enough miles, you have made
enough speeches.'” The service ended with black people and
white people singing "We Shall Overcome," the anthem of the
civil rights movement. This writer realized that he was
witnessing a watershed moment in the history of Charlotte and
Mecklenburg County. Dr. Raymond Wheeler of the Southern
Regional Council appreciated its meaning. "I tell all of you,
black and white, racial separation is not the answer."
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Local physician Raymond Wheeler was a
champion of racial tolerance. |
There
were still major challenges to face. On April 23, 1969,
Federal Judge James B. McMillan ruled for the plaintiffs in the
landmark Swann case. McMillan, a native of Robeson County,
declared that the public schools of Charlotte and Mecklenburg
County had "the affirmative duty to desegregate 'now' by
positive measures." The eventual outcome of his order was the
establishment in 1970 of a system of cross-town busing to assure
that schools would be racially integrated. This community is
still grappling with the issue of how to provide equal
educational opportunities for all children when many
neighborhoods continue to be racially homogenous. Yet the trend
toward greater racial understanding is irreversible. At the
time of the completion of this manuscript African Americans are
fully represented on the Charlotte City Council and the Board of
County Commissioners. A black man is Chairman of the
Mecklenburg County School Board. Another African American is
County Manager. The City Manager is a woman. The two
representatives from Mecklenburg County in the U.S. House of
Representatives are a black man and a white woman.
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Judge James B. McMillan. |
Protestors march in front of Judge
McMillan's home. |
Banks
will lead Charlotte into the new century. Financial
institutions have long occupied a vital place in the history of
this community. The First National Bank of Charlotte opened in
August 1865, followed by the Bank of Mecklenburg four years
later, and the Merchants and Farmers Bank in 1871. Word H. Wood
, a native of Elkin, N.C. and graduate of Eaton & Burnett
Business College in Baltimore, Maryland, moved from Winston,
North Carolina to Charlotte in 1901. He and George Stephens , a
boyhood friend, were instrumental in establishing the Southern
Trust Company , which has evolved into today's Bank of America.
On July 26, 1905, William Henry Belk and others secured a
charter for the Charlotte Trust Company , which later merged
with the Charlotte National Bank and became an initial tenant
of the Realty Building or Independence Building . Certainly, the
opening of the Charlotte Branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of
Richmond on December 1, 1927, furthered strengthened
Charlotte's role as a regional banking center.
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Hugh McColl, Jr. |
The
significance of financial institutions in Charlotte's economy
leaped forward again in the 1980s. Hugh McColl , a feisty
ex-Marine and president from 1983 until 2001 of what is now the
Bank of America, led a successful effort to expand the
operations of local banks across state lines. The bank’s first
out-of-state full service acquisition, because it already owned
a trust company in Orlando, was in Florida in 1982. The pace
quickened after the Supreme Court ruled on June 10, 1985, that
states could band together in regional compacts to permit
reciprocal interstate banking without having to open their doors
to banks from all states. Within months McColl’s bank bought
Pan American Banks Inc. of Miami, Florida, Bankers Trust of
South Carolina, and Southern National Bankshares Inc. of
Atlanta. “If you don’t grow, you do the opposite. You die,”
said McColl in 1987. Like Bonnie Cone , D A. Tompkins, and
Edward Dilworth Latta , McColl is a South Carolinian and a
quintessential Charlottean, because economic development is
uppermost on his agenda. No less aggressive than McColl in
expanding Charlotte’s role in interstate banking was Edward
Crutchfield, Jr., president of First Union Corporation.
If one
could somehow cheat the clock and host a dinner party with such
local notables as Cameron Morrison , Dr. Charles Fox, David
Ovens , Hamilton C. Jones , Ben Douglas, Hugh McColl, and Ed
Crutchfield attending, it would be a harmonious and congenial
gathering, because except on the issues of race and increased
rights for women, Charlotte has not had a fundamentally new
guiding principle in at least 150 years. This writer cannot
help but wonder what the generations of Native Americans who sat
huddled around campfires at the Big Rock would think about the
world that white people and black people have wrought. The Big
Rock now sits in the middle of a suburban housing development
that has lots of cul-de-sacs. The beat goes on. |