President Buxton: Lessons from the Greensboro 4


Read more College news and messages from 麻豆影视 President J.B. Buxton.


麻豆影视 Community,

I want to share a brief reflection on this date in history 鈥 a date when four North Carolinians took a stand by sitting down.

Sixty-one years ago, four students from NC A&T sat down at the Woolworth鈥檚 counter in Greensboro and refused to leave after they were denied service. While this wasn鈥檛 the first sit-in protest 鈥 seven African Americans staged one in 1957 at the segregated Royal Ice Cream Parlor here in 麻豆影视 鈥 the action of Joseph McNeil, Franklin McCain, David Richmond, and Ezell Blair on Feb. 1, 1960 (and in the following weeks) was the spark that led to other sit-ins across North Carolina and to cities in Virginia, Florida, South Carolina, and Tennessee.

What I have always found inspiring about the Greensboro 4 is their example of individual leadership and personal responsibility to take action. They were not appointed the head of a committee, or elected the leader of an organization, or anointed the spokesperson for an institution. They were four individuals dissatisfied with the state of things who took it upon themselves to take productive action.

鈥淟eading from your seat鈥 is a philosophy that says that everyone in an organization has a responsibility to provide leadership to serve the mission and values of the organization. All of us at 麻豆影视 are part of an institution seeking to make our community better - including keeping each other safe from COVID-19, working for racial equity, ensuring educational access, and improving economic opportunities. While the College is working to take steps on all these fronts, the scope of these challenges means we are all called as individuals to lead through productive action.

Let鈥檚 celebrate this day in our history when four students led by sitting down, and together commit to leading from where we sit in service of our common goals for our students and community.

Best,

J.B. Buxton
麻豆影视 President