Orangeburg Massacre: Police Kill Three Black Students in S.C.
As with many such incidents in history, we will probably never know who fired that first shot. All we know is that on the night of Feb. 8, 1968, nine Highway Patrol officers—hearing a shot ring out—fired on a crowd of about 200 African American students gathered on the campus of South Carolina State College in Orangeburg, South Carolina. The students were protesting a local bowling alley that was still segregated, while most other public facilities in Orangeburg had become integrated. The police killed three and injured over thirty that night—the exact number of casualties is still in dispute.
What is not in dispute is the outcome. The nine policemen were put on trial for the killings and all were acquitted. On the other hand, one black activist—Cleveland Sellers—was found guilty of inciting a riot and served seven months in prison. In the end, however, the bowling alley at the center of the dispute, the All-Star Bowling Lanes, became integrated.
The incident was front-page news for the Aberdeen American-News (Aberdeen, South Dakota), which published this copyrighted article on Feb. 9, 1968:
Fight with Police Kills 3 Negroes
Orangeburg, S.C. (AP)—Gov. Robert McNair declared a state of emergency in Orangeburg Friday where three Negro students were killed in a brief exchange of gunfire with police Thursday night.
Thirty-seven persons were injured in the outburst during the fourth night of violence on two adjoining college campuses. The shooting started when state troopers and National Guardsmen attempted to push the students back onto a campus to douse fires they had started.
McNair also ordered a curfew over the entire city beginning at 5 p.m.
“This curfew will continue until the state of emergency is terminated,” McNair told a news conference in his office at Columbia, 34 miles north of Orangeburg.
The crack of gunfire or fireworks could be heard throughout the night from the grounds of South Carolina State College and Claflin College, both predominantly Negro institutions, but this morning all was quiet.
The outbursts began Monday night with a rock-throwing demonstration against the All-Star Bowling Lanes, a privately owned alley operated by Harry K. Floyd on a segregated basis. Students from the two colleges have been trying for months to integrate the facility.
Thirteen persons were injured in flare-ups earlier this week.
Chief J. P. Strom of the State Law Enforcement Division said Cleveland Sellers, 25, South Carolina coordinator of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), was arrested after the incident Thursday night on charges of inciting to riot. He was taken to the South Carolina Penitentiary at Columbia and held under $50,000 bond.
Associated Press photographer Dozier Mobley, who was on the scene of the shootings, said the incident lasted only three or four minutes.
He said the students had set a bonfire near the entrance to South Carolina State College, another near a warehouse across a street, and another by throwing a gasoline bomb against a nearby home of an elderly white woman, Mrs. Mamie Brunson.
About 50 policemen moved in from an intersection 1½ blocks away where the college area had been sealed off. They were followed by about 50 National Guardsmen.
Mobley said the police ordered the Negroes back onto the campus so firemen could enter the area. The police then moved in and the Negroes began throwing rocks and bottles, Mobley said. One patrolman, D. J. Shealy, was struck with a club.
Police took Shealy to a cruiser, which left for a hospital. Then the police started back up a slope toward the group of about 75 Negroes and a shot rang out.
“Get down,” the lead policeman yelled. “They’re shooting at us!”
“Then the shooting started,” Mobley said. “In a few minutes it was quiet and the police moved up the slope and started carrying down the dead and injured.” Several ambulances carried them to Orangeburg Regional Hospital.
The dead included Samuel Hammond, 18, of Ft. Lauderdale, Fl., a freshman, and Delano Middleton, 17, an Orangeburg high school pupil. Henry Smith, 18, of Marion, S.C., a sophomore, died several hours later. Hammond and Smith were students at South Carolina State.
Authorities at the hospital said Fri. morning all 37 injured, including Shealy, were released after emergency room treatment.
Col. Walter Mebane, ROTC commander at South Carolina State, discounted reports that weapons had been stolen from the ROTC armory on the campus. But he acknowledged that “less than 150 rounds” of .22 caliber ammunition were unaccounted. Mebane said, however, that windows in the armory were broken after Thursday night’s shooting incident.
The National Guard sealed off the campuses after the shootings. Guardsmen also cordoned off a five-block downtown area and the shopping center where the bowling alley is situated to guard against looting. Shortly after dawn, all pickets were withdrawn. No looting was reported.
The 50 guardsmen remained on duty at the Orangeburg armory.
Col. Robert McCrady, commanding the Guardsmen, said at a news conference his men carried loaded rifles, but “not one guardsman fired one round of ammunition.”
He said state troopers fired “only after being fired at first by hostile students.”
Floyd closed the bowling alley Wednesday afternoon, but reopened it Thursday night.
The alley is one of the few public facilities in Orangeburg which is not integrated. Most restaurants and Orangeburg’s four theaters are patronized by Negroes.
Orangeburg last had racial trouble in 1960 when a group of Negroes were hosed down by firemen while demonstrating in protest of segregated lunch counters at a variety store. Such lunch counters now are integrated.
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I understand that when writing a blog, it’s necessary to show a picture and say a few words about yourself, so that people don’t think a nameless, faceless committee or advisory board is running the show. Here I am, a real person. My name is Tony Pettinato, and I live in Deerfield, Mass. I did my undergraduate studies in English at Oberlin College, my graduate work in Journalism at UC Berkeley, and have been a reporter for six newspapers. For the past fourteen years I have worked at NewsBank, six of those as a managing editor for the U.S. Congressional Serial Set project – NewsBank’s acclaimed effort that digitized and indexed twelve million pages of primary source documents – that gratified my lifelong interest in American history. And that led me to editing this history blog!
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