Site last updated: Thursday, April 25, 2024

Log In

Reset Password
MENU
Butler County's great daily newspaper

Friendship Nine Judge may vacate convictions

People take part in a civil-rights protest at the McCrory's lunch counter in Rock Hill, S.C., in 1960. A prosecutor today will seek to vacate the convictions of a group known as the Friendship Nine for staging a similar protest at the same lunch counter in 1961.
Civil rights protest led to movement

COLUMBIA, S.C. — Fifty-four years after they were sentenced to a month of hard labor in a chain gang for ordering lunch in South Carolina, nine black men are getting a new day in court.

A prosecutor was expected to ask a judge today to vacate the convictions of the men known as the Friendship Nine, who were arrested for integrating a whites-only lunch counter in the segregated town of Rock Hill.

The fact that these civil rights era crimes will no longer be on their records has brought mixed feelings to the men. Their refusal to pay bail money into the segregationist town's city coffers served as a catalyst for other civil disobedience. Demonstrators across the South adopted their “jail not bail” tactic and filled jail cells. Media attention helped turn scattered protests into a nationwide movement.

“Everything that happened, happened for a reason,” said W.T. “Dub” Massey, one of the nine. “We have to continue what we're doing. If we're backing off from what we've done, then there's a problem here.”

Massey and seven other students at Rock Hill's Friendship Junior College — Willie McCleod, Robert McCullough, Clarence Graham, James Wells, David Williamson Jr., John Gaines and Mack Workman — were encouraged to violate the town's Jim Crow laws by Thomas Gaither, an activist with the Congress of Racial Equality.

About a year had passed since a sit-in at a segregated lunch counter in Greensboro, N.C., helped galvanize the nation's civil rights movement. But change was slow to come to Rock Hill. They decided to challenge matters by getting arrested in February 1961 for ordering lunch at McCrory's variety store, and were convicted of trespassing and breach of peace.

Author Kim Johnson, who published “No Fear For Freedom: The Story of the Friendship 9” last year, went to Kevin Brackett, the solicitor for York and Union counties, to see what could be done to clean their records.

“This is an opportunity for us to bring the community together,” Johnson said. “To have the records vacated essentially says that it should have never happened in the first place.”

Brackett's request to a Rock Hill judge comes too late for McCullough, who died in 2006. But some of the others returned to town ahead of the hearing to reflect on their experience, saying they hope their actions can still have an effect.

“It's been a long wait,” Graham said. “We are sure now that we made the right decision for the right reason. Being nonviolent was the best thing that we could have done.”

More in National News

Subscribe to our Daily Newsletter

* indicates required
TODAY'S PHOTOS