Graphic Images from the 1979 KKK Shootout in North Carolina

Graphic Images from the 1979 KKK Shootout in North Carolina

Jacob Miller - October 1, 2017

The Greensboro Massacre occurred on November 3, 1979, when members of a splinter cell of the Communist Workers’ Party known as the Workers Viewpoint Organization and other demonstrators in Greensboro, North Carolina advocated that Ku Klux Klan (KKK) members should be “physically beaten and chased out of town.” A shootout ensued with members of the KKK, American Nazi Party (ANP) and the Communist Worker’s Party (CWP).

The Worker’s Viewpoint Organization (WVO) and the CWP took a more radical Maoist stance on capitalism and believed the pro-Soviet communists lacked the requisite militancy to instigate the revolution. In 1979 the CWP came to North Carolina to try to organize textile workers and had success unionizing many of the African Americans. These efforts caused conflict between the CWP and the local KKK and ANP chapters.

In October 1979 the WVO renamed itself the Communist Workers Organization and planned to stage a rally and a march against the Klan on November 3 called the “Death to the Klan March” starting in a predominantly black housing project called Morningside Homes and ending at Greensboro City Hall. The CWP/CWO distributed fliers that “called for a radical, even violent opposition to the Klan” and that the Klan “should be physically beaten and chased out of town because] this is the only language they understand. Armed self-defense is the only self-defense.”

As the marchers gathered, a caravan with an estimated 40 KKK and ANP members drove up and down the block. CWP protestors threw rocks at the cars. In response, the KKK and ANP members gathered their guns from the trunks of the cars and CWP members who were armed, drew their pistols. Witnesses reported that KKK member Mark Sherer fired first, into the air.

Four members of the Communist Worker’s Party were killed: Cesar Cause, Dr. James Waller, Bill Sampson Sandi Smith and one non-CWP member who came to the protest in support of his CWP wife, Dr. Michael Nathan. Eleven other demonstrators and Klansmen were wounded.

At the criminal trials of the Klansmen and ANP in 1980, six men were prosecuted with five being charged with murder. All were acquitted. After the criminal trial, survivors filed a civil suit in the same year. The survivors accused members of the Greensboro Police Force and federal agents, as well as Klansmen and ANP members of violating the civil rights of those killed and charged the city with failure to protect the legal demonstration. The jury found the KKK/ANP liable for the death of Dr. Michael Nathan, the only non-CWP victim. The jury also found the Greensboro police department responsible for not doing more to prevent the shootings as they had been tipped off about the impending violence. The groups were made to pay a total of $350,000 in damages.

Graphic Images from the 1979 KKK Shootout in North Carolina
Death to the Klan flyer, circa November 1979. UNCG Libraries
Graphic Images from the 1979 KKK Shootout in North Carolina
A victim of a shootout between the Workers Viewpoint Organization and the KKK lies on the ground in Grensboro, N.C.. Greensboro News & Record
Graphic Images from the 1979 KKK Shootout in North Carolina
National newspaper headlines on the day of Nov. 4, 1979. Greensboro News & Record
Graphic Images from the 1979 KKK Shootout in North Carolina
Greensboro Police Chief William E. Swing addresses participants during a news conference on November 4. Greensboro News & Record
Graphic Images from the 1979 KKK Shootout in North Carolina
News reporters take notes as Police Chief William E. Swing speaks at the news conference. Greensboro News & Record
Graphic Images from the 1979 KKK Shootout in North Carolina
Joyce Johnson, Sally Bermanzohn, and Nelson Johnson at a press conference on November 4. Greensboro News & Record

Graphic Images from the 1979 KKK Shootout in North Carolina
A sign posted in a parking lot on East Market Street in Greensboro, November 11. Greensboro News & Record
Graphic Images from the 1979 KKK Shootout in North Carolina
Signe Waller leads a funeral march to Maplewood Cemetery. Greensboro News & Record
Graphic Images from the 1979 KKK Shootout in North Carolina
Communists participate in the funeral march to Maplewood Cemetery. Greensboro News & Record
Graphic Images from the 1979 KKK Shootout in North Carolina
Photo taken during a march to Maplewood Cemetery. Greensboro News & Journal
Graphic Images from the 1979 KKK Shootout in North Carolina
Conrad Powell comforts his wife Frankie Powell after the Klan-Communist shooting. Greensboro News & Record
Graphic Images from the 1979 KKK Shootout in North Carolina
Jo Long of Colfax, home on leave from the U.S. Navy, has a one man demonstration against the Communist Workers Party on August 4, 1980. Greensboro News & Record
Graphic Images from the 1979 KKK Shootout in North Carolina
Dean Masson of Guilford College stands in front of the old federal building during demonstrations after the KKK trial verdict was announced, November 18, 1980. Greensboro News & Records
Graphic Images from the 1979 KKK Shootout in North Carolina
People march in downtown Greensboro to protest the April 15 verdict in the federal Klan-Communist Trial May 4, 1984. Greensboro News & Record
Graphic Images from the 1979 KKK Shootout in North Carolina
People march in Greensboro to protest the April 15 verdict in the federal Clan-Communist trial on May 4, 1984. Greensboro News & Record
Graphic Images from the 1979 KKK Shootout in North Carolina
Photo of the Communist Workers Party memorial taken October 22, 1981 at the Maplewood Cemetery. Greensboro News & Record

 

Sources For Further Reading:

Teen Vouge – The Greensboro Massacre of 1979

Yes Weekly – Four Myths of The Greensboro Massacre

Politico – The Massacre That Spawned the Alt-Right

Medium – How Do You Reclaim a Massacre?

Greensboro – A Look Back at the 1979 Greensboro Massacre 40 Years Later

Charlotte Observer – Nazis, Klansmen Killed 5 People in NC 40 Years Ago During the Greensboro Massacre

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