By the fourth day of the protest, more than 300 people had joined and the protest had expanded to a lunch counter at a nearby Kress dime store. By the end of the week, students in Winston-Salem ...
The numbers grew so large that the protest even spread to the lunch counter at S.H. Kress & Company, another Greensboro department store. Later dubbed the “Greensboro Four,” McNeil ...
Did you know Nashville was the first major city to officially desegregate public lunch counters? The 1960 Nashville sit-ins ...