Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Freedom Riders’ ‘47 conviction­s vacated by judge

- By Tom Foreman Jr.

HILLSBOROU­GH, N.C. — Legendary civil rights leader Bayard Rustin and three other men who were sentenced to work on a chain gang in North Carolina after they launched the first of the “freedom rides” to challenge Jim Crow laws had their conviction­s posthumous­ly vacated Friday, more than seven decades later.

“We failed these men,” said Superior Court Judge Allen Baddour, who presided over the special session and at one point paused to gather himself after becoming emotional.

“We failed their cause and we failed to deliver justice in our community,” Judge Baddour said. “And for that, I apologize. So we’re doing this today to right a wrong, in public and on the record.”

Speaking to about 100 people in the gallery, Judge Baddour noted they were gathered in the same second-story courtroom in the historic courthouse where the men were initially sentenced.

On April 9, 1947, a group of eight white men and eight Black men began the first “freedom ride” to challenge laws that mandated segregatio­n on buses in defiance of the 1946 U.S. Supreme Court Morgan v. Virginia ruling declaring segregatio­n on interstate travel unconstitu­tional.

The men boarded buses in Washington, D.C., setting out on a twoweek route that included stops in Durham, Chapel Hill and Greensboro, N.C. As the riders attempted to board the bus in Chapel Hill, several of them were removed by force and attacked by a group of angry cab drivers. Four of the so-called Freedom Riders — Andrew Johnson, James Felmet, Bayard Rustin and Igal Roodenko — were arrested and charged with disorderly conduct for refusing to move from the front of the bus.

After a trial in Orange County, the four men were convicted and sentenced to serve on a chain gang. Rustin later published writings about being imprisoned and subjected to hard labor for taking part in the first freedom ride, which was also known as the Journey of Reconcilia­tion.

Renee Price, chair of the Orange County Board of Commission­ers, told the audience that the special session resulted from research by Judge Baddour and his staff that was launched after a previous anniversar­y of the case.

“We are here, 75 years later, to address an injustice and henceforth to correct the narrative regarding the Journey of Reconcilia­tion and that segment of American history,” Ms. Price said.

In 1942, five years before the Chapel Hill episode, Rustin was beaten by police officers in Nashville, Tenn., and taken to jail after refusing to move to the back of a bus he had ridden from Louisville, Ky., author Raymond Arsenault wrote in the book “Freedom Riders: 1961 and the Struggle for Racial Justice.”

A pioneer of the civil rights movement, Rustin was an adviser to the late Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and was instrument­al in organizing the March on Washington in 1963.

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