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  1939
Civil Rights Sit-In

One of America's first sit-ins took place at Alexandria Library on Friday, August 21, 1939.
The present-day Barrett
Branch Library on Queen Street (originally called Alexandria Library)
was the only library building in a city with a population of 33,000. It
was built in 1937 with money donated by the family of Kate
Waller Barrett (1857-1925). However, as with many public services
in the country financed by the community's taxpayers, the library was
only available to whites. African Americans, though they voted and paid
taxes, were not allowed to use the library.
Samuel Wilbert Tucker (1913-1990), who grew up only two blocks from the library, graduated from Howard University and then read for the law. He passed Virginia's bar exam at age 20, but Tucker, an outstanding student, was too young to be sworn in. A year later, he took the oath. Tucker tried for several years to establish equal access to community resources, but the white community, including the Alexandria Library Board, remained unswayed.
In the summer of 1939, perhaps inspired by the recent United Automobile Workers "Sit-Down Strike" against General Motors, Tucker, now 26, developed a new strategy and changed tactics. For weeks, he prepared a select group of African American men for a deliberate act of civil disobedience. Ranging in age from 18 to 22 years, these Alexandrians challenged the status quo.
On Friday, August 21, 1939, patrons and staff at Alexandria
Library watched as a young African American entered the Alexandria Library
and asked to register for a library card. When he was refused, he picked
up a book, took a seat, and began to read. Minutes later, another well-groomed
and polite young adult repeated these actions. This continued until William
Evans, Otto L. Tucker (the attorney's brother), Edward Gaddis, Morris
Murray and Clarence Strange occupied five tables. Each one sat in silence
and read a book.
Flustered library staff called the police. As planned, Robert
Strange (his older brother Clarence was one of the silent protestors)
ran to Tucker's law office to let him know that the police were on their
way.
Police officers escorted the protestors from the library, arresting them
with "disorderly conduct." Samuel Tucker had called a photographer,
who took the photo above, and quickly arranged their release. He planned
to challenge the city in court on the grounds that all citizens were entitled
to equal access to public services. But the city, in an effort to resist
integration, stalled the process with intense negotiations.
Virtually ignored by most newspapers, the case continued
to be widely reported in the African American press across the country.
Samuel Tucker became seriously ill and was unable to pursue the case.
In 1940, community leaders proceeded without the young attorney's involvement
and accepted the promise of a "separate but equal" library.
Tucker was infuriated. The Alexandria Library Board quickly approved the
construction of the Robert
H. Robinson Library, appropriated funding for books, and hired an
African American librarian.
On February 13, 1940, Samuel Tucker replied to a letter
from Librarian Katharine A. Scoggins inviting him to apply for a library
card at Robinson Library. Click to read the complete text of Tucker's
letter. His strongly worded reply demonstrates Tucker's commitment
to equal protection under the law: "I refuse and will always refuse
to accept a card to be used at the library to be constructed and operated
at Alfred and Wythe Streets in lieu of card to be used at the existing
library on Queen Street for which I have made application."
Samuel W. Tucker remained a leader in the war against segregation and intolerance. He argued groundbreaking civil rights cases across the state. He served as the lead lawyer for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) in Virginia, appeared before the U.S. Supreme Court four times, and was a founding partner in the prominent Richmond law firm Hill, Tucker, and Marsh.
On October 19, 2000, a decade after Tucker's passing, his
hometown dedicated its newest
elementary school in his honor. The sit-in is chronicled
in a documentary called Out of Obscurity. Copies may be borrowed
from Alexandria Library. On Friday, August 21, 2009, Alexandria
Library hosted the 70th
Anniversary of this first civil rights sit-in.