Alabama Clears the Records of 29 Black Students Who Protested Segregation
Read more: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/58-years-later-alabama-clears-records-29-black-students-who-protested-segregation-180969220/#agIf4fty2zsb3u7K.99
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In February 1960, a group of 29 black students from Alabama State College sat down at a lunch counter in the snack room of the Montgomery County Courthouse. In the segregated South, this was an act of radical protest. And as punishment for their defiance, Alabama’s governor ordered that 20 of the students be placed on academic probation. The remaining nine, believed to be the leaders of the protest, were expelled.
Some 58 years since that lunch counter sit-in, Alabama officials are correcting the record. As John Sharp reports for AL.com, last month interim education superintendent Ed Richardson expunged the files of the students who had been disciplined for their role in the protest.
In a letter dated May 10, Richardson also cleared the records of four faculty members who were “forced out of the College on an unsubstantiated charge of disloyalty” in 1960.
Read more: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/58-years-later-alabama-clears-records-29-black-students-who-protested-segregation-180969220/#agIf4fty2zsb3u7K.99
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