Home / Full timeline / Black students protesting the desegregation plans in Wilmington, NC, spark four days of racial violence. Local officers, aided by the 600 national guardsmen, are sent to restore order.
Black students protesting the desegregation plans in Wilmington, NC, spark four days of racial violence. Local officers, aided by the 600 national guardsmen, are sent to restore order.
1971 (Feb 6 - 9)
National guardsmen patrolled the streets of Wilmington, North Carolina, in the wake of four days of racial violence in which two people were killed. The unrest was linked to a boycott of Wilmington's high school by Black students. Blacks were protesting the city's desegregation plans. The first of the two slayings took place on February 6 when a Black youth was killed by a police officer who said the boy pointed a shotgun at him. Blacks in Wilmington asserted the youth was shot as he helped move furniture from a home threatened by a nearby fire. The second victim was a white man who was shot later outside of a Black church which was being used as headquarters by the boycotting Blacks. The white man was armed with a pistol. Local officers, aided by the 600 national guardsmen, restored order on February 8 but remained on alert.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.