Boggled protest led to Freedom Marches

Boggled protest led to Freedom Marches

by Don Rose 
Feb 20, 2011 02:12AM
The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. falls after being struck by a brick
thrown by someone in a taunting mob in Marquette Park on Aug. 5, 1966. |
Sun-Times File

The summer of 1966, when the Chicago Freedom Movement kicked into high
gear, will long be remembered as the time of civil rights marches into
hostile white neighborhoods — but those marches were never on the
movement’s initial agenda. Here’s what actually happened.

One phase of the Freedom Movement’s housing agenda was aimed at
achieving open occupancy (as it was called then) by showing up the
nature of housing discrimination by the real estate industry and the
toothlessness of Chicago’s open-housing ordinance.

The agenda began by testing real estate agencies to determine racial
steering. We carefully selected white communities that were at least one
mile from racial boundary streets (such as Ashland Avenue on the South
Side) and at a median economic level that the typical black family could
afford.

A white couple would go to a local real estate office to see what
apartments might be available in the neighborhood, followed by a black
couple and then by another white couple. As expected, the white couple
would be shown places only in a white section, the black pair would only
be shown something in the black sector — and told nothing else was
available — then the second white couple would be shown something only
in a white section.

A report of this would be made to the Chicago Commission on Human
Relations, which had the responsibility under the ordinance for
sanctioning the real estate broker. If nothing happened after the
report, a vigil was to be called outside the offending real estate
office.

The first agency to be tested, reported and not sanctioned was F.H.
Halvorsen Real Estate at 63rd and Kedzie, serving the targeted Gage Park
neighborhood. A vigil was called on July 28.

About 100 black and white demonstrators stood outside the agency doors
holding placards and singing freedom songs. The Reverends Jesse Jackson
and James Bevel were in charge of the program because the Rev. Martin
Luther King Jr. was out of the city and Freedom Movement co-chair Al
Raby was occupied elsewhere.

As the day wore on, local whites began gathering near the vigil,
heckling and jeering. Toward sundown, the white crowd grew larger and
increasingly vociferous, though the police were successful at that point
in keeping the groups separated.

The white crowd grew noisier and may have begun tossing stones or other
small missiles at the demonstrators. It seemed that violence was
imminent — all under the glare of TV lights with a full complement of
media looking on. (I was at that time the Chicago Freedom Movement’s
press secretary/media liason.)

It was evident that violence would grow as the dark of night came on. No
one wanted to disperse near the angry white crowd. The police then
offered an alternative: They would truck the demonstrators away in
police wagons. Bevel and Jackson agreed to the deal and the world was
treated to the sight of peaceful civil rights demonstrators filing into
the wagons much like common criminals. The white crowd jeered louder and
screamed obscenities at each of the demonstrators climbing into the
wagons.

We were deposited at the South Side Freedom Center in an Englewood
church.

In the back room, a group of the leadership clustered in grief and
embarrassment. Raby returned to the Center, furious. He said we should
have demanded police protection for a march back to the Center. He
conferred with Dr. King by phone.

Brainstorming the issue, I, among others, said that because of the
humiliating retreat, the only way to retrieve our dignity and affirm our
right to demonstrate peacefully was to plan a march back to the
Halvorsen office from the Freedom Center. Dr. King agreed and the action
was set for the two days later.

That march, led by Raby, planned to go west on 79th Street, then through
Marquette Park, then north to the office. But it was met by jeering,
rock- and bottle-throwing white crowds lining 79th Street when we got
west of Ashland, then massive violence when the line of march got to the
park itself.

Cars were burned and run into the pond in the parks. The police not only
failed to protect us, but they also seemed to encourage the white youths
to carry on with the violence.

We were stymied at the park. Groups of us sat down and sang. The whites
just ahead of us screamed epithets and sang their own racist song
parodies. One of them was, to the tune of an Oscar Meyer jingle, “I wish
I was an Alabama trooper, then I could kill a n - - - - - fearlessly.”

With many people hurt by flying missiles, their cars burned and other
damage inflicted because the police failed in their duties to protect
us, we headed back to the Freedom Center. Angry whites lined the south
side of 79th as we filed by on the north side of the street — then,
almost magically, things were peaceful as we crossed Ashland. I recall
describing the scene by phone later that day to Lu Palmer, who was then
a reporter for the old Chicago’s American.

It would be another two days before we made the march all the way
through Marquette Park and to the Halvorsen office — this time protected
by Chicago Police, who were given orders to do so after the earlier
debacle. But they could not fully protect Dr. King, who had returned to
Chicago to lead this particular, successful march. That was the day he
was stunned and briefly felled by a flying brick in the middle of
Marquette Park.

That was also the beginning of a series of marches throughout that
summer into a host of hostile of white communities that met our economic
and geographic criteria. Our agenda had changed.

Political consultant Don Rose writes for the Chicago Daily Observer.

--
http://www.suntimes.com/opinions/3855168-474/boggled-protest-led-to-freedom-marches.html
Via InstaFetch

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