Leesburg Stockade

The Leesburg Stockade was an event in the civil rights movement in which a group of African-American teenage and pre-teen girls were arrested for protesting racial segregation in Americus, Georgia, and were imprisoned without charges for 45 days in poor conditions in the Lee County Public Works building, in Leesburg, Georgia. The building was then called the Leesburg Stockade, and gave its name to the event. The young prisoners became known as the Stolen Girls.[1][2]

In July, 1963, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (the SNCC), in cooperation with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, organized a protest march in Americus from the Friendship Baptist Church to a segregated movie theater.[3] As part of the protest, a group of young women joined the line to attempt to purchase tickets at the movie theater, and were arrested for doing so.[2] After being held briefly in Dawson, Georgia, the protesters were moved to the Leesburg Stockade.[2] Estimates of the number of young women who were held there range from 15[2] to about 30[1] or as many as 33.[4]

Some of the prisoners were as young as 12.[1] Conditions in the stockade were poor: the prisoners had only concrete floors to sleep on, water only in drips from a shower, a single non-functional toilet, and poor food.[2][5] The prison authorities did not inform the parents of the prisoners of their arrest or location, and they only found out through the help of a janitor.[2] The young women were threatened with murder, and at one point a rattlesnake was thrown into their cell.[4] After the SNCC and Senator Harrison A. Williams used a set of photos by Danny Lyon to publicize the situation,[2][1][5] the young women were released, and did not face any criminal charges, but were nevertheless charged a fee for their use of the facilities.[2]

Two of the Leesburg Stockade women, Carol Barner Seay and Sandra Russel Mansfield[6], were added to the Hall of Fame of the National Voting Rights Museum in 2007.[4] The National Museum of African American History and Culture of the Smithsonian Institution publicized the story of the stolen girls in 2016, and they were recognized by a resolution of the Georgia state legislature.[3]

Girls of the Stockade[7]

  1. Carol Barner Seay
  2. Lorena Barnum
  3. Gloria Breedlove
  4. Pearl Brown
  5. Bobbie Jean Butts
  6. Agnes Carter
  7. Pattie Jean Colier
  8. Mattie Crittenden
  9. Barbara Jean Daniels
  10. Gloria Dean
  11. Carolyn Deloatch
  12. Diane Dorsey
  13. Juanita Freeman
  14. Robertiena Freeman
  15. Henrietta Fuller
  16. Shirley Ann Green
  17. Verna Hollis
  18. Evette Hose
  19. Mary Frances Jackson
  20. Vyrtis Jackson
  21. Dorothy Jones
  22. Emma Jean Jones
  23. Melinda Jones- Williams
  24. Emmarene Kaigler
  25. Barbara Ann Peterson
  26. Annie Lue Ragans
  27. Judith Reid
  28. Laura Ruff
  29. Sandra Russell
  30. Willie Mae Smith
  31. Eliza Thomas
  32. Billie Jo Thornton
  33. Lulu M. Westbrook
  34. Ozeliar Whitehead
  35. Carrie Mae Williams

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Stolen Girls remember 1963 in Leesburg, WALB, July 24, 2006 .
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 George, Bradley; Blankenship, Grant (July 19, 2016), "The Girls Of The Leesburg Stockade", GPB News, NPR .
  3. 1 2 "Leesburg Stockade Girls to be part of Smithsonian publication", Americus Times-Recorder, March 25, 2016 .
  4. 1 2 3 "Stolen Girls: Footsoldiers inducted into Hall of Fame", Selma Times-Journal, March 6, 2007 .
  5. 1 2 Seeger, Pete; Reiser, Bob (1989), Everybody Says Freedom: A history of the Civil Rights Movement in songs and pictures, W. W. Norton & Company, p. 97, ISBN 9780393306040 .
  6. Staff Reports (March 6, 2007). "'Stolen Girls': Footsoldiers inducted into Hall of Fame". The Selma Times- Journal. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
  7. Schwartz, Heather (2017). Locked Up for Freedom: Civil Rights Protesters at the Leesburg Stockade. Minneapolis, Minnesota: Millbrook Press. pp. Page 6. ISBN 9781467785976.
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