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KI D RE P ORT E RS ’ N OT E B OOK
This segment of the Greensboro lunch counter where students staged sit-ins in 1960 is on
display at the National Museum of American History in Washington, D.C.
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11/30/22, 10:31 PM The Greensboro Four | Kid Reporters' Notebook | Scholastic Inc.
Woolworth’s. The young black men politely asked for coffee. When told that they
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would not be served, the friends sat peacefully until the store closed.
This quiet act of rebellion sparked a series of sit-ins across the South to end racial
segregation. “It became what we call a ‘spark’ that was created here, and it spread
like wildfire across North Carolina,” says Cassandra Williams, a guide at the
International Civil Rights Center & Museum, which is in the same building that
once housed the Woolworth’s.
From February 1 until July 25, 1960, the “Greensboro Four,” as they became
known, staged a series of sit-ins. They were joined by tens of thousands of
students, both black and white. Even people in the North, where Woolworth’s
lunch counters were not segregated, wanted to support the movement.
“People boycotted the stores in the North,” Williams says, “telling others not to eat
there.”
LIVING HISTORY
On July 25, 1960, the Woolworth’s lunch counter in Greensboro was finally
integrated. People of all races could sit together to eat. But it would take a few
more years for every business in Greensboro to take down the “whites only” signs
for good.
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11/30/22, 10:31 PM The Greensboro Four | Kid Reporters' Notebook | Scholastic Inc.
Today, the old Woolworth’s lunch counter serves as a museum where people can
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learn about civil rights history. Visitors can see where McCain, McNeil, Blair, and
Richmond actually sat down in 1960. “I love meeting all the new people,” says
museum guide La’Tonya Wiley. “I like being able to give them information to add
to their knowledge.”
The Greensboro Four sat down not just for themselves. They wanted to create a
better world for everyone. Such acts of courage still inspire us today.
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