Alexandria_Library_sit-in

Astro geolocation

38.80777778, -77.04694444

Location reference Astro Chart

The Alexandria Library sit-in was one of the first staged sit-in actions in the United States, pioneering the use of nonviolent direct action to demand equal rights for African Americans. On August 21, 1939, five Black men sat down inside the Alexandria Public Library and quietly read books, a transgression of the library's "whites only" policy. Their actions were coordinated by Alexandria attorney Samuel Wilbert Tucker, who planned the action to create a test case challenging the library's racial segregation policy. The men were escorted out of the library by police and charged with disorderly conduct. A ruling was not filed in their court case; in October 2019, all charges against the men were dismissed. The Alexandria sit-in is one of the earliest precursors in the U.S. of the strategies used during the civil rights movement.

Location name
Alexandria_Library_sit-in
astro_wikipedia_idname
Alexandria_Library_sit-in
a_location_idunic
Samuel_Wilbert_Tucker/Alexandria_Library_sit-in