In Orangeburg, two years before the Kent State murders, 28 students were injured and three killed, most shot in the back by state police while they were involved in a peaceful protest.
One by-stander, Cleveland Sellers, was arrested for inciting a riot and sentenced to a year in prison. He is now the president of Voorhees College and was the only person to serve time.
Learn more from the film Scarred Justice: The Orangeburg massacre 1968, here: http://bit.ly/10yj6tH
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Footnotes
- The injuries received by patrolman David Shealy preceded police opening fire on the crowd by five minutes
- Cleveland Sellers was later arrested and convicted of starting the riot. Received a full pardon in 1993
- John Carson was beaten by highway patrol after he started questioning their involvement
- Louise Kelly Cawley was pregnant at the time of her being beaten and sprayed with a chemical. One week after the incident, she suffered a miscarriage
- John H. Elliot was later added to the list of those injured. He was shot in the stomach but did not go to the hospital for treatment.
Media coverage
This was the first incident of its kind on a United States university campus. The Orangeburg killings received relatively little media coverage. The events predated the 1970 Kent State shootings and Jackson State killings, in which protesters against the Vietnam War were killed by the National Guard, and by the local and state highway patrol, respectively. The perceived overreaction by law enforcement helped galvanize public opinion against the war as well.
The historian Jack Bass attributed the discrepancy in media coverage in part due to the Orangeburg incident occurring after large-scale urban riots, which made it seem small by comparison. It may not have been considered as newsworthy, especially since the shootings occurred at night, when media coverage, especially any television news, was less. In addition, the victims at Orangeburg were mostly young black men protesting against local segregation. Linda Meggett Brown wrote that subsequent events in the spring of 1968: the assassinations of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Robert Kennedy, the Democratic presidential candidate; and theTet Offensive in Vietnam, overshadowed the events at Orangeburg.
At Kent State, by contrast, Bass noted that the victims were young white students protesting against the U.S.war in Vietnam, which had become increasingly unpopular and a highly politicized, national issue. They were attacked by members of the National Guard, which the media may have judged was a more inflammatory aspect of the shootings. The black students at Jackson State were also protesting against the war, and the killings there took place shortly after those at Kent State. It appeared that law enforcement and university administrations had no idea about how to handle campus unrest. There was widespread public outrage over the events.
Legacy
- South Carolina State University's gymnasium is named in memory of the three men who were killed. A monument was erected on campus in their honor and the site has been marked. All-Star Triangle Bowl became integrated.
- On August 9 of 2013 a work crew fixed a spelling error on the Orangeburg Massacre Monument. Delano H. Middleton's name was mistakenly listed as Delano B. Middleton. One theory for the incorrect initial is that it was pulled from Middleton's nickname "Bump." The error went unnoticed for over 40 years.
- In 2001 Governor Jim Hodges attended the university's annual memorial of the event, the first governor to do so. That same year, on the 33rd anniversary of the killings, an oral history project featured eight survivors telling their stories at a memorial service. It was the first time that survivors had been recognized at the memorial event. Robert Lee Davis told an interviewer,"One thing I can say is that I'm glad you all are letting us do the talking, the ones that were actually involved, instead of outsiders that weren't there, to tell you exactly what happened."
- A joint resolution was introduced in the South Carolina state general assembly in 2003, and re-introduced in each of the next three sessions of the legislature, to establish an official investigation of the events of February 8, 1968, and to establish February 8 as a day of remembrance for the students killed and wounded in the protest; but the resolution was never voted on by the legislature.
- The Orangeburg Massacre was the subject of two films released on the 40th anniversary of the massacre, in April, 2008:Scarred Justice: The Orangeburg Massacre, 1968 by documentary filmmakers Bestor Cram and Judy Richardson, and Black Magic by Dan Klores.
See also
- Kent State shootings
- Jackson State killings
- Protests of 1968
- Greensboro massacre
- List of killings by law enforcement officers in the United States
References[edit]
- ^ Shuler, Jack, Blood & Bone: Truth and Reconciliation in a Southern Town" (Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 2012), 21
- ^ "28th Name Added To Massacre List 40 Years Later", Fox Carolina News, 2008
- ^ Shuler, Jack, Blood & Bone," 75-78
- ^ Shuler, Jack, Blood & Bone", 81
- ^ Bass, Jack (Fall 2003). "Documenting the Orangeburg Massacre" (PDF). Nieman Reports (Harvard University) 57 (3): 8–11.
- ^ Shuler, Jack, Blood & Bone", 18.
- ^ "Press dispatches" (February 21, 1968). "Riot Quelled at Negro College". The Milwaukee Journal.
- ^ Robert M. Ford (February 8, 1968). "Three Persons Killed in Orangeburg Riots". The Times-News(Hendersonville, NC). Retrieved November 27, 2010.
- ^ "Uneasy Calm Enforced After Days of Rioting". Middlesboro Daily News. February 10, 1968. RetrievedNovember 27, 2010.
- ^ Shuler, Jack, Blood & Bone", 19 & 84
- ^ Linda Meggett Brown, "Remembering the Orangeburg Massacre", Black Issues in Higher Education, March 1, 2001. Accessed April 1, 2005.
- ^ WLTX News staff, "Name on Orangeburg Massacre Monument Finally Fixed", August 11, 2013.
- ^ South Carolina General Assembly, S. 377, introduced in the Senate on February 18, 2003.
- ^ South Carolina General Assembly, S. 215, introduced in the Senate on January 12, 2005.
- ^ South Carolina General Assembly, H. 3824, introduced in the House on March 29, 2007.
- ^ South Carolina General Assembly, S. 35, introduced in the Senate on January 9, 2009.
- ^ Tim Arango, Films Revisit Overlooked Shootings on a Black Campus, New York Times, April 16, 2008.
- ^ IMDB, "Scarred Justice: The Orangeburg Massacre, 1968", accessed 24 June 2015.
- ^ IMDB, "Black Magic", accessed 24 June 2015.
- Shuler, Jack (2012). Blood and Bone: Truth and Reconciliation in a Southern Town. University of South Carolina Press.
Further reading[edit]
- Sellers, Cleveland L. (1998), "Orangeburg Massacre: Dealing honestly with tragedy and distortion", The Times and Democrat, January 24, 1998.
- Bass, Jack; Nelson, Jack (2003). The Orangeburg Massacre: Second Edition. Mercer University Press.ISBN 978-0-86554-552-6.
- Watters, Pat, and Rogeau, Weldon (1968). Events at Orangeburg; a report based on study and interviews in Orangeburg, South Carolina, in the aftermath of tragedy. Southern Regional Council, Atlanta.
- Beacham, Frank (2007). Whitewash: A Southern Journey through Music, Mayhem and Murder: Second Edition. Booklocker. ISBN 978-1-59113-187-8.
External links[edit]
- Brian Cabell, "Remembering the 1968 Orangeburg Massacre", February 8, 2001. Web posted at: 4:02 p.m. EST (2102 GMT). Accessed April 1, 2005.
- Jack Bass, "Documenting the Orangeburg Massacre", Neiman Reports. Harvard University. Fall 2003. Accessed May 21, 2007.
- Linda Meggett Brown, "Remembering the Orangeburg Massacre", Black Issues in Higher Education, March 1, 2001. Accessed April 1, 2005.
- "On the Freedom Road: A Guardian reporter visits the All-Star Triangle Bowl", The Guardian, Accessed May 21, 2007.
- Video
- 1968, "Forty Years Later: A Look Back at the Orangeburg Massacre", Democracy Now!', 2008, Accessed April 3, 2008.
- "Scarred Justice: the Orangeburg Massacre 1968, a documentary distributed by California Newsreel.
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