A Guide to the Leesburg Civil Rights Posters, 1963 Leesburg Civil Rights Posters OMB 007

A Guide to the Leesburg Civil Rights Posters, 1963

A Collection in the
Thomas Balch Library
Collection Number OMB 007


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Thomas Balch Library

Thomas Balch Library
208 West Market Street
Leesburg, Virginia 20176
USA
Phone: (703) 737-7195
Fax: (703) 737-7195
Email: balchlib@leesburgva.gov
URL: http://www.leesburgva.gov/departments/thomas-balch-library/

© 2006 By Thomas Balch Library. All rights reserved.

Processed by: Carolyn Jackson

Repository
Thomas Balch Library
Collection number
OMB 007
Title
Leesburg Civil Rights Posters 1963
Physical Characteristics
Collector
Gertrude Ashton Evans
Language
English
Abstract
This collection consists of 25 posters used in a civil rights protest in Leesburg, Virginia in 1963.

Administrative Information

Access Restrictions

Collection open for research .

Use Restrictions

No physical characteristics affect use of this material.

Preferred Citation

Leesburg Civil Rights Posters, 1963 (OMB 007), Thomas Balch Library, Leesburg, VA..

Acquisition Information

Gertrude Ashton Evans, Leesburg, VA.

Alternative Form Available

Digital surrogates

Accruals

2009.0098

Processing Information

Processed by Carolyn Jackson, 23 June 2010

Historical Information

Desegregation in Leesburg was a gradual and generally peaceful occurrence that resulted in desegregated lunch counters as early as 1961. Loudoun County schools began desegregating in 1963, and were completely integrated by 1968, when the African-American high school, Douglass High, closed. However, in the summer of 1963, parts of Leesburg remained segregated, including the baseball field and swimming pool.

Leesburg volunteer firemen's swimming pool, which was built in 1956, was a public pool for white swimmers only. After successfully protesting to integrate both the Tally-Ho Movie Theater and Village Lanes Bowling Alley in the early summer of 1963, Leesburg's African-American community, including leader Gene Ashton (1946- ) and his sister Gertrude (Ashton) Evans (1948- ), turned its focus to the swimming pool. Even after several weeks of peaceful protests, they did not have any success; the firemen persistently refused to let blacks in. The swimming pool remained open for the remainder of the summer, but was still segregated. In 1965, one year after President Lyndon B. Johnson (1908-1973) signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibiting discrimination based on color, four African-American children were again refused entry to the Firemen's Swimming Pool. They and their parents filed federal suit under the aegis of Civil Rights Act. The following spring, the court ruled in favor of the children and ordered the firemen to allow black swimmers into the pool. The firemen refused and closed the pool to avoid having to integrate. The pool remained closed and in 1968, the land was sold and the pool was filled in with rocks and cement. It was not until 1990 that Leesburg again had a public swimming pool and not until 2009 that it had an outdoor public pool.

Scope and Content

This collection consists of 25 posters used in a civil rights protest in Leesburg, Virginia in 1963. They are made of poster board, and writing is black or green marker over pencil.

Adjunct Descriptive Data

Bibliography

Exline, Matthew. "We Have Been Waiting Too Long": Civil Rights and the Death of Segregation in Loudoun County, Virginia. Leesburg, Virginia, 2010.

Other Finding Aid

Past Perfect Catalogue Records


Technical Requirements

None

Other Finding Aid

Past Perfect Catalogue Records


Bibliography

Exline, Matthew. "We Have Been Waiting Too Long": Civil Rights and the Death of Segregation in Loudoun County, Virginia. Leesburg, Virginia, 2010.

Contents List

OMB 007
Box 1
  • Folder 1: Posters, 1963
    "You may as well accept it, integration is here!"
    "Some Loudoun businessmen are finally waking up, but the firemen are in a deep sleep!"
    "Will the Firemen's Carnival be segregated like the Firemen's Swimming Pool?"
    "It's the 20th. Not the 18th Century"
    "We are just asking for the things you take for granted"
    "Walk for Freedom"
    "We have been waiting too long"
    "Are Heaven and Hell segregated?"/[verso] "Not Backward"
  • Folder 2: Posters, 1963
    "Are your Christian consciences hurting at all?"/[verso] "Why Doesn't Leesburg Move Ahead?"
    "Do you segregate our money too?"
    "Do we have to wait another 100 years?"
    "The whole world is (finally) awaking, but Leesburg is still asleep"
    "Freedom!"
    "Is this the United States of America?"
    "We like to swim too."/[verso] "Equal Opportunity"
    "Where are the leaders of our town?"
  • Folder 3: Posters, 1963
    "Christians! Where?"/[verso] "Leesburg! Go Forward!"
    "Segregation is backed by ignorance"/[verso] "Don't worry, our color isn't contagious"
    "What are the businessmen afraid of?"/verso] "An end to discrimination"
    "We aren't slaves."/[verso] "Is Segregation a Virtue of yours?"
    "Don't be afraid it's only integration"
    "Does Leesburg have any intelligent firemen?"
  • Folder 4: Posters, 1963
    "Don't stop here unless you are white and your money is green."
    "Unless you are white, this is private property"
    "Slow down please -- thank you"/[verso] "We thought Leesburg Had Leaders"