Letters from an American - September 14, 2025
Episode Date: September 15, 2025Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe...
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September 14th, 2025.
At 1022, on the morning of Sunday, September 15th, 1963,
a bomb ripped through the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama.
It was Youth Day in the historic brick church,
and five young girls dressed in their Sunday best were in the ladies' lounge,
getting ready for their part in the Sunday service that was about to start.
As Denise McNair, Cynthia Wesley, Carol Robertson, and Addie Mae Collins were chatting and adjusting
their dresses, a charge of dynamite stashed under the steps that led to the church sanctuary
blasted into the ladies' lounge. It killed the four girls instantly.
Standing at the sink in the back of the room, Addie's sister Sarah survived with serious injuries.
Just five days before, black children had entered the formerly all-white schools
after an August court order required an end to segregation in Birmingham's public schools.
The decision capped a fight over integration that had begun just after the May
1954 Brown versus Board of Education decision, in which the Supreme Court declared segregation
unconstitutional. In that same year, in the wake of the successful 31-day Montgomery
Alabama bus boycott to protest that city's segregated bus system, Birmingham's Reverend Fred
Shuttlesworth, along with the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr., the Reverend Ralph Abernathy,
and strategist and civil rights activist Bayard Rustin, started the Southern Christian Leadership
Conference, or SCLC, to challenge segregation through nonviolent protest, rather than trusting
the work to the courts alone. On September 9th, 1957, Shuttlesworth and his wife Ruby, along with other
black parents, tried to enroll their children in the city's all-white flagship John Herbert
Phillips High School. A mob of white Ku Klux Klanzman met them at the school, attacking them with
chains and bats. Someone stabbed Ruby Shuttlesworth in the hip with a pocket knife, and an amateur
videographer captured a man named Bobby Frank Cherry on video, reaching for brass knuckles before
diving back into the attack on Shuttle'sworth. Cherry had no children at the school. Over the next
several years, the Ku Klux Klan lost the political struggle over civil rights, and its members
increasingly turned to public violence. There were so many bombings of civil rights leaders' homes
and churches that the city became known as
Bombingham.
When the Freedom Riders,
civil rights workers who rode
interstate buses in mixed-race groups
to challenge segregation, came through
Birmingham, police commissioner
Eugene Bull, Conner,
looked the other way as KKK members
beat the riders with baseball bats,
chains, rocks, and lead pipes.
Connor was a perfect foil for civil rights
organizers who began a campaign of nonviolent direct action to challenge segregation in Birmingham.
Shuttlesworth invited King to Birmingham to help. One of the organizers' tactics was to attract
national attention by provoking Connor, and participants in the movement began sit-ins at libraries,
kneel-ins at white churches, and voter registration drives. In April 1963, Connor got an injunction
barring the protests and promised to fill the jails. He did. King's famous letter from a Birmingham jail
was a product of Conner's vow, smuggled out of jail on bits of paper given to him by a sympathetic
inmate. In the letter, King responded to those who opposed the civil rights protests, and,
claiming to support civil rights, said that the courts were the proper venue to address social injustice.
King agreed that the protest created tension, but said that such tension was constructive.
It would force the city's leaders to negotiate.
Wait, he reminded them, has almost always meant never.
But Conner's tactics had the chilling effect he intended,
as demonstrators shied away from being arrested out of fear of losing their jobs
and being unable to provide for their families.
So organizers decided to invite children to.
to join a march to the downtown area.
When the children agreed, the SCLC held workshops
on the techniques of nonviolence
and warned them of the danger they would be facing.
On May 2, 1963, they gathered at the 16th Street Baptist Church,
just blocks away from Birmingham City Hall.
As students moved towards City Hall in waves,
singing, We Shall Overcome,
police officers arrested more than 600
of them and blocked the streets with fire trucks. The national news covered the story.
The next day, Bull Connor tried another tactic to keep the young protesters out of the downtown.
Fire hoses set to the highest pressure. When observers started to throw rocks and bottles at the
police with the fire hoses, Connor told police officers to use German shepherd dogs to stop them.
Images from the day made the national news and began to galvanize support for the protesters.
By May 6th, Connor had turned the state fairgrounds into a makeshift jail to hold the overflow of protesters he was arresting,
and national media figures, musicians, and civil rights activists were arriving in Birmingham.
By May 7th, the downtown was shut down, while Connor arrested more people and used fire hoses again.
The events in Birmingham were headline news.
By May 10th, local politicians, under pressure from businessmen,
had agreed to release the people who had been arrested,
to desegregate lunch counters, drinking fountains, and bathrooms,
and to hire black people in a few staff jobs.
After Conner's insistence that he would never permit desegregation,
white supremacists in Birmingham felt betrayed by the New Deal,
basic though it was.
Violence escalated over the summer, even as King's letter from a Birmingham jail was widely published and praised,
and as civil rights activists, fresh from the Birmingham campaign, on August 28th, held the March for Jobs and Freedom in Washington, D.C.,
where King delivered the I Have a Dream speech.
For white supremacists in Birmingham, the children and the 16th Street Baptist Church, where they had organized, were the symbols of the movement that had been,
eaten them. Their fury escalated in summer 1963 when a lawsuit the Reverend Shuttlesworth had filed
to challenge segregation in public schools ended in August with a judge ordering Birmingham public
schools to desegregate. Five days after the first black children entered a white school as students,
four members of the Kahaba River Group, which had splintered off from another Ku Klux Klan group
because they didn't think it was aggressive enough, took action.
Thomas Blanton, Robert Shamblis, Herman Cash, and Bobby Frank Cherry,
the same man who in 1957 had beaten the Reverend Shuttlesworth with brass knuckles
for trying to enroll his children in school,
bombed the 16th Street Baptist Church.
Just wait until Sunday morning and they'll beg us to let them segregate,
Chambliss had told his niece.
The death of innocent church,
children, on a Sunday morning, in a House of God, at the hands of white supremacists drew national
attention. It woke up white people who had previously been leery of civil rights protests,
making them confront the horror of racial violence in the South. Support for civil rights legislation
grew, and in 1964, that support helped legislators to pass the Civil Rights Act. Still, it seemed
as if the individual bombers would get away with their crimes. In 1968, the FBI investigation
ended without indictments. But it turned out the story wasn't over. Bill Baxley, a young law
student at the University of Alabama in 1963, was so profoundly outraged by the bombing that he
vowed someday he would do something about it. In 1970, voters elected Baxley to be Alabama's
Attorney General. He reopened the case, famously responding to a Ku Klux Klan threat by responding
on official state letterhead, Kiss my B. The reluctance of the FBI to share its evidence
meant that Baxley charged and convicted only Robert Chambliss, whose nickname in 1963 was Dynamite Bob,
for the murder of Denise McNair. But still, the story wasn't over.
Another young lawyer named Doug Jones was in the courtroom during that trial, and in 1997,
President Bill Clinton appointed Jones as U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Alabama.
Jones pursued the case, uncovering old evidence that had been sealed and finding new witnesses.
Herman Cash had died, but in 2001 and 2002, representing the state of Alabama,
Jones successfully prosecuted Thomas Edwin Blanton and Bobby Frank Cherry for first-degree murder.
Chambliss, Cherry, and Blanton all died in prison.
Chambliss in 1985, Cherry in 2004, and Blanton in 2020.
Doug Jones went on to serve as a senator from Alabama from 2018 to 2021.
On this anniversary of the bombing, Senator Jones talked with me on my YouTube channel
about the events of that day, justice, healing, and what lessons today's Americans can take
from the bombing and its aftermath.
Letters from an American was written and read by Heather Cox Richardson.
It was produced at Soundscape Productions, Dead and Maths.
Massachusetts. Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.