
<record>
<id>ugabma_wsbn_33019</id>
<item>33019</item>
<coll>wsbn</coll>
<repo>ugabma</repo>
<public>yes</public>
<dc_title>WSB-TV newsfilm clip of Roy Wilkins, executive secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, clarifying the history of sit-ins as a direct action tactic at a press conference, 1960</dc_title>
<dc_creator>WSB-TV (Television station : Atlanta, Ga.)</dc_creator>
<dc_subject>Civil rights workers--United States</dc_subject>
<dc_subject>African American civil rights workers--United States</dc_subject>
<dc_subject>Sit-ins--United States</dc_subject>
<dc_subject>Civil rights movements--United States</dc_subject>
<dc_subject>Civil rights demonstrations--United States</dc_subject>
<dc_subject>Reporters and reporting--United States</dc_subject>
<dc_subject>Press conferences--United States</dc_subject>
<dc_subject>Camera operators--United States</dc_subject>
<dc_subject>Segregation--United States</dc_subject>
<dc_subject>Discrimination in public accommodations--United States</dc_subject>
<dc_subject>Discrimination in restaurants--United States</dc_subject>
<dc_subject>Direct action--United States</dc_subject>
<dc_subject>National Association for the Advancement of Colored People</dc_subject>
<dc_subject_personal>Wilkins, Roy, 1901-1981</dc_subject_personal>
<dc_description>In this WSB newsfilm clip from 1960, Roy Wilkins, executive secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), to reporters at a press conference about the wave of sit-ins throughout the United States sparked by four North Carolina students.</dc_description>
<dc_description>The clip begins with Roy Wilkins sitting in a room with empty chairs facing cameras and lights; cameramen and reporters are seen behind the cameras. During a silent portion of the clip, Wilkins appears to speak. After the silent portion of the clip, Wilkins explains that the tactic of sitting at a lunch counter and waiting until being served did not begin with the February 1, 1960 event in Greensboro, North Carolina and claims that the NAACP originated sit-ins. He explains that local youth group NAACP chapters in Wichita, Kansas and Oklahoma City, Oklahoma conducted sit-ins in 1958 that led to desegregation. He also reminds the audience that in 1959 NAACP youth council members held sit-ins in Saint Louis. He concludes with another assertion that the NAACP originated the concept of sit-ins.</dc_description>
<dc_description>Although there is some dispute as to whether the idea of sit-ins began with the NAACP or with the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), sit-ins were conducted with mixed results before 1960. Sit-ins in 1958 in Oklahoma and Kansas resulted in lunch counter integration; similar attempts in 1959 were unsuccessful in Miami and in Saint Louis, where stores removed the lunch counters. After the February 1, 1960 sit-in by four students at North Carolina Agriculture and Technical State University in Greensboro, North Carolina, young civil rights workers around the country began holding lunch counter sit-ins and demanding integrated service. This younger generation of civil rights workers responded enthusiastically to the nonviolent, direct action tactics embodied in the sit-ins. In response to the surge of student activism, the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) hosted a student conference in April at Shaw University in Raleigh, North Carolina; during this meeting, the participants formed the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). SNCC played a central roll in the Civil Rights movement for the next several years. By the fall of 1961, every Southern and border state had experienced sit-ins, with over one hundred communities effected and over seventy thousand individuals arrested throughout the country.</dc_description>
<dc_description>Title supplied by cataloger.</dc_description>
<dc_description>The Civil Rights Digital Library received support from a National Leadership Grant for Libraries awarded to the University of Georgia by the Institute of Museum and Library Services for digital conversion and description of the WSB-TV Newsfilm Collection.</dc_description>
<dc_publisher>Athens, Ga. : Digital Library of Georgia and Walter J. Brown Media Archives and Peabody Awards Collection, University of Georgia Libraries</dc_publisher>
<dc_contributor>Wilkins, Roy, 1901-1981</dc_contributor>
<dc_contributor>Digital Library of Georgia</dc_contributor>
<dc_contributor>Walter J. Brown Media Archives and Peabody Awards Collection</dc_contributor>
<dc_contributor>Civil Rights Digital Library Collection (Digital Library of Georgia)</dc_contributor>
<dc_date>2007</dc_date>
<dc_type>Moving images</dc_type>
<dc_type>News</dc_type>
<dc_type>Unedited footage</dc_type>
<dc_identifier>http://dlg.galileo.usg.edu/crdl/id:ugabma_wsbn_33019</dc_identifier>
<dc_source>1 clip (about 1 min.): black-and-white, sound ; 16 mm.</dc_source>
<dc_source>Original found in the WSB-TV newsfilm collection.</dc_source>
<dc_relation>Forms part of: Civil Rights Digital Library.</dc_relation>
<dc_coverage_temporal>1960</dc_coverage_temporal>
<dc_coverage_spatial>United States</dc_coverage_spatial>
<dc_rights>WSB-TV newsfilm clip of Roy Wilkins, executive secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, clarifying the history of sit-ins as a direct action tactic at a press conference, 1960, WSB-TV newsfilm collection, reel 0735, 12:19/13:14, Walter J. Brown Media Archives and Peabody Awards Collection, The University of Georgia Libraries, Athens, Ga, as presented in the Digital Library of Georgia.</dc_rights>
<media_filename1>wsbn33019</media_filename1>
<media_length1>1</media_length1>
<upd>20111116 123843</upd>
</record>
