East Bay Times

Southern civil rights activist Meredith Anding Jr., 79, dies

- By Leah Willingham

JACKSON, MISS. >> Meredith C. Anding Jr., a member of the “Tougaloo Nine” who famously participat­ed in a library “read-in” in segregated Mississipp­i 60 years ago, has died. He was 79.

Anding was diagnosed with leukemia and had been sick since March, his son Armaan Anding said. He died Friday in Brandon, Mississipp­i.

The Tougaloo Nine were students at the historical­ly Black institutio­n Tougaloo College who staged a peaceful sit-in at Jackson’s whiteonly library on March, 27, 1961. It is widely considered the first student protest of segregatio­n at a public institutio­n in Mississipp­i.

Anding is the second member of the Tougaloo Nine to die, after Ameenah Evelyn Pierce Omar in 2010.

Inspired by lunch counter sit-ins in other southern states like North Carolina, Mississipp­i students decided to target the state’s publicly-funded libraries.

Students noticed there were major disparitie­s between what resources were available at Jackson’s library for Black residents, George Washington Carver, and the library for white residents, Jackson Public Library. Materials were generally secondhand at the Black library and many books that students needed for class assignment­s were missing.

On March 27, 1961, nine students first visited the Black library requested books they knew were not available. They then visited Jackson Public Library and searched for the books.

When they sat down and began to read, the library staff called the police. The students refused to leave. They were arrested and charged with breach of the peace.

T he underg ra duates spent the night in jail. The next day, Jackson college students picketed the Tougaloo Nine’s arrest and were met by police with clubs and dogs.

When the students were released, they were greeted by applauding Black community members outside the courthouse. Again, policemen with nightstick­s descended on the crowd.

Two men — including a Black pastor — were bitten by police dogs.

In 1962, spurred by the protests, the American Library Associatio­n membership adopted a new policy that opened up membership to everyone regardless of race. In response, Mississipp­i and several other southern states withdrew from the associatio­n.

Armaan Anding said his father inherited his passion for social justice from his father, who was a member of the NAACP and his aunt, civil rights pioneer A. M. E. Logan.

Logan, known as the mother of Jackson’s Civil Rights movement, was a businesswo­man who opened her home to Freedom Riders.

“Being a part of the movement, supporting the movement, that was really embedded in their family’s DNA,” said Daphne Chamberlai­n, Assistant Provost and Assistant Professor of History at Tougaloo College who was close with Logan.

Armaan said his father joined the NAACP youth chapter and developed a relationsh­ip with Medgar Evers, who recommende­d him to participat­e in the Tougaloo protest. Evers, a prominent Mississipp­i activist, was later assassinat­ed in 1963.

Anding, who was raised in Myles, Mississipp­i, attended Tougaloo from 1961 to 1962. After participat­ing in the Tougaloo Nine protest, Anding lost a private loan and had to drop out, his son said. He joined the Air Force, serving for four years. He returned to Tougaloo in 1969 to finish his

degree.

Anding then moved to Buffalo, New York, to attend the University of Buffalo and earned his master’s degree in mathematic­s. There, he met his wife of 50 years, Maurice Anding. He taught at the State University of New York and Niagra University until his retirement in 2007.

Anding’s son described him as cheerful, easygoing and calm. Anding had a deep love for the outdoors, especially camping and fishing.

In recent years, Anding and his wife moved back to Mississipp­i to be closer to family.

Anding remained involved in the Tougaloo community, attending events celebratin­g the 50th anniversar­y of the protest. He was present at a dedication of a Freedom Trail Marker at the site of the protest in 2017.

Anding, like other members of the Tougaloo Nine, felt the Tougaloo Nine should have received more recognitio­n for their place within the civil rights movement in Mississipp­i, his son said.

After the Tougaloo Nine protest, the college became known as “cradle of the Civil Rights Movement” in Mississipp­i and a “safe haven” for activism, said Chamberlai­n, who studies children’s effect on the movement.

Tougaloo holds an annual “read-in” demonstrat­ion around March 27 to remember the Tougaloo Nine. The school is in the process of planning a 60th-anniversar­y celebratio­n this year to honor the activists.

 ?? ROGELIO V. SOLIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Meredith Anding Jr., one of the “Tougaloo Nine” college students who participat­ed in a library “read-in” in segregated Mississipp­i on March, 27, 1961, died Jan. 8.
ROGELIO V. SOLIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Meredith Anding Jr., one of the “Tougaloo Nine” college students who participat­ed in a library “read-in” in segregated Mississipp­i on March, 27, 1961, died Jan. 8.

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