Sixty Years Ago, This Unforgettable Photo of Birmingham Police Attacking Black Children Changed History

A Picture Can Truly Say a Thousand Words, as We Remember the May 3 Birmingham Children’s March and the Photo of Police Violence that Changed Everything.

By Rayna Reid Rayford 

It had been eight years since Rosa Parks had refused to give up her seat on the bus, sparking the Montgomery Bus Boycott, and the fight toward desegregation was stagnating. Civil rights leaders needed something that would reignite the cause and those committed, and they finally got one in the spring of 1963, “after an unorthodox plan to recruit Black children to march was implemented, the movement reversed itself, reinvigorating the fight for racial equality,” in what is now referred to as the Birmingham Children’s March.

Whose idea was it to involve children? James Bevel, a member of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, came up with the unique strategy, which “involved recruiting popular teenagers from Black high schools, such as the quarterbacks and cheerleaders, who could influence their classmates to attend meetings with them at Black churches in Birmingham to learn about the non-violent movement.” Another bonus of involving youth had to do with the economy—if adults participated in these marches, they were at risk of getting fired and losing gainful employment.

As a result of these circumstances, on May 3, 1963, hundreds of young people gathered in Birmingham as part of a 10-week protest segregation. They would be attempting to march from the 16th Street Baptist Church down to City Hall, which is only a distance of 0.5 miles. But many never even made it through the full route because Eugene “Bull” Connor, the white Birmingham Commissioner of Public Safety, “directed the local police and fire departments to use force to halt the demonstration.”

This might have been an invisible moment in history had photographers not captured the violence.

The images captured that day literally became the spark that reignited the flagging movement as photos “of children being blasted by high-pressure fire hoses, being clubbed by police officers, and being attacked by police dogs appeared on television and in newspapers, and triggered outrage throughout the world.”

In a serendipitous instance, esteemed civil rights photographer Hudson, captured the exact moment “when a police officer grabbed the fifteen-year-old Walter Gadsden by the collar, pulling the boy toward him to provide an easy target for the attack dog at his side. Gadsden looks on, powerless to repel the dog lunging for his abdomen.” The next day, Hudson’s iconic photo, which has now become synonymous with this march, ended up on the front of The New York Times.

 

About Carma Henry 24838 Articles
Carma Lynn Henry Westside Gazette Newspaper 545 N.W. 7th Terrace, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33311 Office: (954) 525-1489 Fax: (954) 525-1861

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