- Felton Turner
Felton Turner (
April 2 ,1933 -April 23 ,2006 ) was anAfrican-American whose survival from a vicious attack onMarch 7 ,1960 , helped galvanize the city ofHouston, Texas during theAmerican Civil Rights movement .Turner was an 27-year-old unemployed awning installer in Houston who fell victim to the enmity caused by continuing sit-in demonstrations against segregation. Those protests, coming just over a month after the first such actions in
Greensboro, North Carolina , had begun onMarch 4 at the local Weingarten's store by students fromTexas Southern University . Turner, who was not involved in the student's actions, was walking just a block from his home when he was abducted at gunpoint and transported to a deserted area five blocks away.During the ride, Turner was continually hit with a chain for approximately 30 minutes. The most chilling part of the ordeal came next as he watched the men carve two sets of "KKK" (in reference to the
Ku Klux Klan ) into his stomach, then hang him by his knees to a nearby tree.Following the departure of his captors, Turner was able to free himself, quickly calling police. On
March 15 , 18-year-old Ronald Gene Erickson was arrested for the crime following a routine traffic stop.The attack helped awaken the African-American community in Houston to the continued injustices committed and also helped gain support for the students actions, including expanding the sit-ins to the downtown's
Walgreen's stores. Over the next three years, virtually all businesses in downtown Houston were desegregated.A 1997 documentary entitled, "The Strange Demise of Jim Crow: How Houston Desegregated its Public Accommodations, 1959-1963," examines the Turner attack as part of the overall picture of civil rights in the city.
External links
* [http://www.coe.uh.edu/untold_stories/biographies/turner_bio.html biography]
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