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Anniston, Ala. -- On September 15, 1963, members of
the civil rights community here had good reason to feel hopeful. The
city of Anniston had recently appointed a bi-racial Human Relations
Council, composed of nine local ministers, to help guide the city
through those dangerous times. It was such a radical step, in its
day, that President John Kennedy took notice. He sent the group his
personal congratulations, and began mentioning Anniston in speeches
as a model for other cities to follow.
Strictly by chance, September 15 had long been planned by the
bi-racial Council as the day that Anniston would quietly…and
secretly…take the first step of de-segregating its public library.
The ministers had no idea how badly their plans were about to go
wrong.
McClain: "Man, you don’t know what it was like, in this
town."
Rev. Bob McClain, a native of nearby Gadsden, had just been named
pastor of Anniston’s Haven Chapel United Methodist Church. He was 24
years old, newly married, fresh out of seminary in Boston, and was
committed to changing Anniston’s oppressive racial climate.
McClain: "I expected the Methodist preachers to welcome me with
open arms. They wouldn’t even talk to me on the telephone, let alone
come to the office."
After striking out with the Methodists, McClain telephoned all of
the city’s white Baptist pastors…with the same result. Somehow, he
got the name of Rev. J. Phillips Noble, pastor of Anniston’s First
Presbyterian Church.
Noble: "The whole thing of what was happening during the Sixties
was an absolute absurdity. And of course, it had been an absurdity
for years. It was an emotional time, from the standpoint that so
many terrible things were happening in the South. I knew it was
wrong, but I wasn’t really doing anything, you see?"
From the beginning, McClain and Noble was the most unlikely of
partnerships…a young black firebrand, and a middle-aged, white,
soft-spoken moderate, born and raised on a farm in Mississippi. But
somehow, the two hit it off.
This past weekend, McClain and Noble were reunited for the first
time in 40 years...at a civil rights symposium hosted by the
Anniston Public Library, to celebrate the publication of Noble’s new
memoir, “Beyond the Burning Bus,” from NewSouth Books in Montgomery.
The title refers to one of the darkest headlines of Anniston’s
history, when members of the Ku Klux Klan ambushed a busload of
Freedom Riders in 1962. Noble’s book also contains the untold story
of the dramatic events in Anniston on September 15, 1963, that would
forever be overshadowed by Birmingham’s tragedy.
As McClain says, in the preface he wrote for Noble’s book, he
remembers vividly the day that he and fellow black pastor Nimrod
Reynolds, of Anniston’s 17th Street Baptist Church, first met with
Noble...
McClain: "I remember the day very well. I can almost feel
Nimrod’s car, and us driving literally across town. Anniston was
divided, really. We said, we'll just tell him the way it is, how
black people feel...and lay it out before him and see if he was a
Christian. That was the way we approached it... 'See if he was a
Christian.' He was gracious. He seemed a little shaky at first, but
gracious. We talked about no jobs, discrimination, segregation,
colored restrooms and waiting rooms."
Noble: "And when they said what I already knew…the burden of
segregation, and the dehumanization of discrimination that was
taking place…to say that, and to hear them say that, it was moving.
It was moving."
McClain: "Nimrod talked, I talked. We looked up and Phil said,
‘Brothers, let’s pray.’ I will never forget him...(voice
breaks)"
Even today, McClain’s eyes fill with tears when he recalls the
breakthrough of that first meeting.
McClain: "By the time Phil asked the Lord to be present with us
and to help us figure out what to do, tears were coming out my eyes,
and Nimrod’s eyes, and we looked up and Phil was crying. I had never
seen a white man cry about black folks before."
All three men would soon become members of the Human Relations
Council, with Phil Noble as its chairman. Fast-forward to September
15, when McClain and Reynolds were chosen to drive downtown that
afternoon and de-segregate the city’s main library.
McClain: "I remember our discussion...do you, Phil? We said,
'This will be the easiest.' (Laughs)"
Noble: "Yes, I do. (Both men laugh hard.)"
McClain: "Realize what we’re talking about…we’ve just heard this
morning that 16th Street Baptist Church has been bombed, and four
little girls, black girls, have been killed. In Birmingham, which is
60 miles away. We’ve just heard that. You have to remember what
that...what it... (voice trails off)"
Noble: "We were going to see that the library was integrated, to
say to two groups…to the whole community wide, and especially to the
hoodlums…the city is going to run itself, and the hoodlums are not
going to determine what happens, what we do, in this city."
McClain: "As I remember it, there were steps up to the library
from the street, I believe, and then a landing, and then some more
steps. When we got up to the landing, I looked and I saw a lot of
people. And that was unusual, because it was a Sunday afternoon and
you didn’t expect much activity. From every direction, there were
men…white men…coming at us. I could see them coming from cars, from
back of the library, from every direction. The newspaper said there
were 75 of them. I don’t know how many there were. It looked like
thousands and thousands, to me. (Both men laugh) We never made the
second set of steps."
Noble: "Chains, and knives, and clubs."
McClain: "'Niggers, niggers, niggers.' That kind of just...hate
stuff."
Reynolds was the first to hit the concrete, bleeding badly.
McClain was able to ward off the blows long enough to drag him back
to their car.
McClain: "They had jammed the car in so closely I couldn’t get
the car out..."
Noble: "There was a shot fired."
Phil Noble was not at the library that day, but he’s heard the
story so many times that he spontaneously fills in the gaps...
Noble: "A shot came through the glass of the automobile. It
landed in the seat right behind..."
McClain: "Right behind my neck. So we got out of the car and I
literally carried Nimrod as we ran down the street. I don’t know how
we got out of there, to tell you the truth. I really don’t know why
and how Nimrod and I are alive."
Noble: "It’s providence. God’s providence."
As word of the pastors’ beatings spread throughout the city,
people from the black community began gathering at Rev. Reynolds’
church…a crowd of hundreds, that soon grew to more than a thousand.
Reynolds was in bed from his injuries, so the task of speaking to
the angry crowd fell to McClain.
McClain: "There were more people outside 17th Street Baptist than
there were inside. And the people came with guns and knives and
everything else. They were ready to come and rip this town apart. I
preached from Isaiah... 'He was wounded for our transgressions, He
was bruised for our iniquities. The chastisement of our peace was
upon Him, and with His stripes we are healed.' I urged them, that
night, not to go into town. 'We know you’ve got the guns, we know
you’ve got the power. Please, brothers and sisters, we’re not going
to turn into violent people. We’re Christians.' And that was the
only thing I had, to use…was the gospel as I understood it. (Pause)
They heard. They heard."
Noble: "I’ve said so many times, that white people ought to be so
grateful that the leaders of the civil rights revolution were
ministers, like Martin Luther King, and Bob, and Nimrod, and us. You
could have had other kinds of people leading it who would have had
bloodbaths all over...you see what I’m saying?"
McClain: "Although Anniston would face its share of racial
struggles in the months to come, there was a widespread feeling that
the city had somehow turned a corner, that night. Even today,
McClain says, as he travels the country, preaching and lecturing,
people sometimes come up to him afterward, to talk about that
long-ago Sunday."
Noble: "On occasion, someone will come up to me and say, 'You
know, I'm from Anniston, Alabama. I’m ashamed of what happened to
you and Rev. Reynolds.' I say... 'We did what we had to do. I hope
you are now working at changing things like that, wherever you are.'
And I believe that. I believe if you’re serious about being a
Christian...serious about being an American...you ought to be
working at making sure people are treated right. I’m not talking
about Iraq. I’m talking here in the United States. We ought to make
sure that everybody has freedom and liberty, and nobody’s
discriminated against. This is a great country, but it can go down,
too."
"Yeah."
(Music ends the piece: Anniston Community Choir singing ‘Jesus Is
A Rock In A Weary Land’)
~Dale Short, September 17,
2003
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