The legal charge was disturbing the peace for trying to buy bus tickets at the Whites-only counter. The expulsions were for conduct unbecoming a student.
Fifty years later, and for the first time in Georgia history, the state’s university system bestowed 32 honorary degrees at a single university, what is now called Albany State University, during a single commencement.
“We all benefit from the courage and selflessness of those young people,” said Albany State President Everette Freeman. “Remember, they were, in every respect, just kids, and yet they were willing to risk everything for a just America.”
The movement that led to the expulsions began in 1959 with a three-person impromptu sit-in at an Albany drive-in restaurant. Among them was Annette Jones, who later became Miss Albany State College. She lost her crown and a scholarship after being expelled, but Annette Jones, now Jones White, said her focus was just doing the right thing.
“By the time I was ready to demonstrate, I didn’t think about being expelled, losing the scholarship, what the president might think of me,” she said. “… It was superficial in light of all of the other things that were more pressing.”
Freeman said when he became president of Albany State, an HBCU, in 2005, he knew he wanted to honor the Albany Movement students for the 50th anniversary. At the December commencement, 16 men and 16 women were present or represented to receive their degrees, not just for their 1960s activities but for their contributions since then. The university couldn’t contact either the student or a family member of the remaining eight.
Each honorary bachelor’s degree had this phrase imprinted on the degree: “To restore justice among the groves of the academe.”
Bernice Johnson Reagon, the commencement speaker and one of the expelled protesters, received an honorary doctorate. Reagon, founder and member of the a cappella group Sweet Honey in the Rock, also has worked as a music consultant, a composer and performer and is a noted historian and Smithsonian curator. Reagon said the civil rights movement was transitional for her becoming an intellectual scholar.
“All around me,” she said, “people were getting arrested, beaten, losing their jobs. I thought those of us who were fighting the legal system would have to pay the consequences. I was so clear that I was going to walk this particular journey. There were quite a few of us who were not deterred. We just kept looking for ways to help push and build a movement in southwest Georgia.”
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