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Eye for an Eye: The Role of Armed Resistance ... - Freedom Archives

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as the Voters League met at the Union Hall <strong>an</strong>d most Voter League members <strong>an</strong>d<br />

Deacons were union members<br />

While Hicks <strong>an</strong>d Young were considered the primary spokespersons <strong>for</strong><br />

the Bogalusa Voters League, clearly the public representative <strong>an</strong>d leader <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Bogalusa Deacons was Charles Sims . Sims was a veter<strong>an</strong> <strong>of</strong> the U.S . Army <strong>an</strong>d<br />

World War II. An insur<strong>an</strong>ce agent by pr<strong>of</strong>ession, prior to 1964, Sims was consid-<br />

ered a "trouble-maker" in Bogulusa . Having been arrested be<strong>for</strong>e his <strong>for</strong>mal<br />

entr<strong>an</strong>ce into the Movement <strong>for</strong> carrying a concealed weapon <strong>an</strong>d assault, Sims, a<br />

prototypical "Bad Negro," did not fit the stereotypic image <strong>of</strong> a southern Move-<br />

ment leader. Like C.O . China, Sims was not a minister or a idealistic young<br />

student but a bold talking, gun carrying "tough" who had a reputation <strong>for</strong> verbally<br />

<strong>an</strong>d physically confronting local whites . Sims did not ch<strong>an</strong>ge his image as the<br />

leader <strong>of</strong> the Deacons . In fact his image may have been <strong>an</strong> asset in the frontier<br />

climate in this Louisi<strong>an</strong>a town . In confronting the Bogalusa Kl<strong>an</strong>, civility was not<br />

a virtue?1<br />

In the spring <strong>an</strong>d summer <strong>of</strong> 1965, violent confrontations ensued between<br />

the Deacons <strong>an</strong>d Kl<strong>an</strong> <strong>for</strong>ces . On several occasions armed Deacons had to rescue<br />

CORE workers from local white terrorist civili<strong>an</strong>s . As in Jonesboro, Deacon<br />

patrols monitored Bogalusa Black neighborhoods in the evenings from invading<br />

nightriders . Hicks <strong>an</strong>d Young also received special protection. On July 8th, Dea-<br />

con Henry Austin was arrested <strong>for</strong> shooting <strong>an</strong>d critically wounding a white male,<br />

Alton Crowe, who was physically attacking particip<strong>an</strong>ts in a demonstration .<br />

Louisi<strong>an</strong>a Governor John McKeiten dispatched state troops to Bogalusa to pre-<br />

vent further violence <strong>an</strong>d threatened to disarm Deacons <strong>an</strong>d Kl<strong>an</strong>s men alike .

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