Home / Full timeline / Racial tensions in Columbus, Georgia erupts into violence when seven members of the Black American Police League were fired from the police department for picketing police headquarters and removing the American flag shoulder patches from their uniforms.
Racial tensions in Columbus, Georgia erupts into violence when seven members of the Black American Police League were fired from the police department for picketing police headquarters and removing the American flag shoulder patches from their uniforms.
1971 (Jun 4)
Racial tensions in Columbus, Georgia, the state's second largest city, erupted into violence. The trouble began on May 31, 1971, when seven members of the Black American Police League, including its executive director, were fired from the police department for picketing police headquarters and removing the American flag shoulder patches from their uniforms. The Blacks were protesting alleged racial discrimination in the police department. Police department officials accused the Blacks of conduct unbecoming to an officer and said they ripped the flags from their uniforms. The officers said they gently removed the emblems. On June 3, the Muscogee County grand jury announced that complaints of discrimination against Black officers were unfounded. The jury said it found no basis for charges of the use of unnecessary force in the arrests of Blacks but instead criticized both the Black American Police League, which made the charges of discrimination and police brutality, and the Fraternal Order of Police, a union. On June 19, Hosea Williams, National Program Director for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) and Chairman of the Georgia statewide Black Leadership Coalition, led more than five hundred Blacks on a fifteen-block march in Columbus, then issued a five-point ultimatum to city and county officials. The coalition demanded the reinstatement of thirteen Black policemen, promotion of the thirty-eight Blacks still on the force, desegregation of jail facilities, a biracial citizens police review board, and increased hiring of Black police officers. On June 21, Columbus Mayor J. R. Allen declared a state of emergency following a weekend of racial strife. A total of twenty-six fires attributed to arsonists were set in the city, and a Black man was fatally wounded by police. The city council gave the mayor broad powers to order a curfew, shut down stores selling alcoholic beverages, stop the sale of firearms, and curtail gasoline sales. Meanwhile, the Black American Police League called for a city-wide boycott of white businesses.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.