According to the Newspapers...

Day 1: Tuesday, July 28th

At about 6:15 PM, picketing organized by the Congress of Racial Equality began in front of the Vigilant Associates realty office at 234 Old Country Road, near the Center Shops plaza. The pickets varied in age; the group included both blacks and whites. During the picketing, their number fluctuated between 12 and 22. They carried signs urging that racial bias be ended, and that existing laws be upheld. The pickets were led by Lincoln Lynch, the ranking CORE member on Long Island.

At least two white clergymen would join the picket line: Rev. Domenic K. Cianella of Hicksville's Holy Trinity Episcopal Church, and Father John Murphy of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Rockville Center.

Vigilant's President told reporters that the allegations which had prompted the complaint were untrue.

A smaller group of young counter pickets appeared. They made their motives crystal clear, shouting out what was written on their signs: Vote for Barry, and Would You Want Your Daughter to Marry A N---r? The next day's news reports pointed out that they had misspelled the 'N word' on their placards.

Day 2: Wednesday, July 29th

CORE began picketing began at 6:00 PM, but it ended early, only about two hours later, because of rain. There were 20 pickets, most of them white.

The opposition's original young pickets now were joined by a number of adults, who swelled their ranks to about 40. The misspelled 'N word' had been crossed out, replaced by the word Negro on the original signs, but it reappeared (spelled correctly) on new ones. The adults in the picket line were loud and vituperative. Newsday reported their taunts, including Back to Africa! N---rs Stay Out of Hicksville! and Get Your Spears!

Police likely prevented violence from breaking out when the counter demonstrators tried to penetrate the CORE picket line.

Day 3: Thursday, July 30th

As before, the CORE pickets slowly walked an oblong route. A crowd of about 125 had gathered to watch. There were fewer counter demonstrators than the day before. After a while, one of them suddenly jumped into the center of the CORE route, jostling the pickets as they passed him. Again, police intervened to keep the groups separate.


A counter picket pushes his way between CORE pickets; Lincoln Lynch is on the right
Newsday, July 31, 1964

Once back among the counter pickets, the man tried to incite the crowd to action, shouting Let's run 'em out of here! Another in his group shouted Go Home, Monkeys! at the predominantly white CORE pickets. These two men proudly gave their names and addresses to reporters, and Newsday printed them. They were residents of Hicksville. In response to a phoned-in bomb threat, police searched the realtor's offices.

Lincoln Lynch told the press more about the protest's origin. Black and white prospective clients had separately visited Vigilant; the black client was not told about local homes that were shown to the similarly qualified white client. The human rights complaint had been filed days before, but problems with its wording were discovered, and it was being re-filed to correct them. Picketing would continue.

For its part, Vigilant announced that it was bringing a libel suit against CORE itself, and also against the individuals who had participated in establishing its test case.

Day 4: Friday, July 31st

The counter pickets arrived first, and they decided to walk the route that COREhad walked previously, thereby blocking access to Vigilant just as effectively as their opponents had. Lincoln Lynch set up his pickets nearby, in the parking lot. Several white high-school aged girls left the crowd (which numbered almost 1,000) to walk with CORE.

The counter demonstrators seemed to be in a party mood. Eventually, they formed a conga line, which snaked happily into the parking lot, effectively abandoning their picket route. Lynch's group immediately tried to reclaim it; their opponents ran back, and a shoving / shouting contest ensued. Out of nowhere, police vans appeared. 50 steel-helmeted "special events" police intervened in the skirmish. With the police presence now doubled, calm was restored.

A young man in the crowd told reporters that he was forming an independent "anti-CORE" group. Another man distributed John Birch Society literature that promoted the aggressive use of dogs by police.

Many families stood in the crowd, the parents choosing to let their children witness how events were unfolding. The racist shouts - including the chilling Lynch Lincoln! - persisted, but the crowd rarely responded to them either way. Now and then, someone would shout support for Republican Presidential candidate Barry Goldwater.

Day 5: Saturday, August 1st

MISSING!

Alas, the primary source for this timeline is an archive of newspapers, in which Newsday plays a vital part. As Newsday did not publish a Sunday edition in this era, it made no report on Saturday's events. Although Associated Press stories about these events appeared in newspapers across the country, I have yet to find any report of what happened on this day.

Day 6: Sunday, August 2nd


New York Daily News, August 3, 1964

On Sunday, the usual CORE picket line was in place. Again, a number of white female students (they said that they attended school in Hicksville) assembled in the crowd, and then walked as a group to join the pickets. In all, there now were about 50 people on the picket line.

At first, the opposing pickets seemed better organized. Despite the heat, the young women wore dresses and heels, and the young men wore dress shirts and neckties; some of them even wore suits. The group's leader (an onlooker who did not picket) told reporters that they had decided to "look presentable" in order to attract more support from adults. As time went by, however, the suits and ties gave way to jeans and undershirts, and the dresses were replaced by tops and - per the news report - "tight stretch pants." One picket wore a pointed white hood; another carried a sign urging support for the Ku Klux Klan, his sign spelling the organization's name incorrectly.

Crowd size was estimated at 700; news reports said the people were quiet most of the time. Some of the young counter pickets carried a large Confederate States battle flag; occasionally, one of them would run out beyond the picket areas, holding it aloft, and receive scattered cheers. At other times, a few people in the crowd would jeer the counter demonstrators' shouts.


Both picket lines, August 2, 1964
from Verga, Civil Rights on Long Island

As the hours passed, the counter pickets garnered increasing vocal support from the people in the crowd who were closest to them. The next morning's news reports said that by the end of the evening (the pickets always left at 11:00 PM), they had amassed a solid cohort of vocal supporters, hundreds strong, which apparently was led by "young white toughs."

As always, when the picketing ceased, Lincoln Lynch started walking to his car. The cohort then began to chant N---r!, N---r! and it surged mob-like through the police lines, heading for him. It was stopped by a cordon of helmeted special police. Frustrated to be kept away from Lynch, some in the crowd threw eggs, rocks, and shards of glass at the police. Two men, one from Hicksville, and one from East Meadow, were arrested. A white onlooker claimed that a black policeman had assaulted him with a nightstick, but no witnesses or evidence substantiated the charge.

It seemed obvious that the end-of-evening attempt to assault Lynch had been orchestrated beforehand, and that the sympathizers had planned in advance to congregate in that spot. The mixed crowd of quiet onlookers had not spontaneously decided to take sides and indulge in violence. It is interesting to contemplate what might have happened had the police in fact used attack dogs when they were set upon by the very people who had recommended them.

Reported in the next day's news, almost as an afterthought, was the most significant development to date. A group not otherwise identified, but referred to as the Hicksville Human Rights Committee, had started the process that would be needed to establish a dialogue between Vigilant and CORE.

Day 7: Monday, August 3rd

The two men who had been arrested on Sunday were being held without bail, having pled guilty to disorderly conduct. One of them, a white anti-CORE picket, had also entered a guilty plea when charged with 3rd degree assault on the black policeman who arrested him.

Sunday's tensions continued on Monday evening. There were 900 onlookers, 50 CORE pickets, and 40 opposing pickets. Newsday noted that among the latter there were only a few adults, perhaps 10 at the most.

One man in the crowd sat atop a friend's shoulders, waving an anti-CORE sign, publicly (and illegally) drinking liquor from an open bottle. Eventually, he was arrested for disorderly conduct, at which point perhaps 200 people screamed at the police: Who are you for... the n---rs? The partisan crowd unsuccessfully tried to again break through the police barricades. A girl of 16, also sitting atop someone's shoulders and yelling, fell to the pavement. She would require treatment at Meadowbrook Hospital. Meanwhile, another bomb threat was called in to distract the police.

As all this was happening, negotiations were being conducted elsewhere. It was revealed that two meetings on Sunday, called by the County Executive, had failed to reach a solution. On Monday, inside the Vigilant offices, the Regional Director of the Commission for Human Rights had met with the company's President and other executives. Independently, CORE had brought forward an eight-point program to end bias by all realtors.

Day 8: Tuesday, August 4th

During the day, representatives of Vigilant and CORE met face-to-face in county offices in Mineola. The counter-pickets, who had expressed no interest in being at the table (or in resolving matters), did not participate in the negotiations, but two clergymen and an unspecified number of county officials did. At the end of the day, both sides agreed that "considerable progress" had been made. For now, the picketing would continue.

More people than ever gathered that night along Old Country Road. Estimated at more than 1,000, the crowd was unusually quiet. There were at least 100 CORE pickets, and nearly as many counter pickets. A news photograph showed one of the latter, wearing a jacket with a large patch. It showed an Equality Button with a diagonal line struck through the equal sign.

The number of police had been increased to 125. There were no critical "incidents." For whatever reason - perhaps the earlier arrests, the start of negotiations, the increased police presence, or the utter failure of past attempts to incite violence - no onlooker or picket tried very hard to agitate the crowd.


Newsday, August 5, 1964

Day 9: Wednesday, August 5th

There was almost no picketing on Wednesday night. At 4:30 that afternoon, following about 24 hours of continuous negotiations, the adversaries reached an agreement. The resolution was straightforward, and to some extent, far-reaching. Both sides voiced enthusiastic approval.

CORE withdrew its complaint, called off its picketing, and agreed to in the future give any realtor three days' notice in which to resolve problems before it picketed.

Vigilant Associates agreed to "continue to observe the State law," to inform its salespeople about the law, to discontinue its lawsuits against CORE and its members who had taken part in the test case, and to use the words Fair Housing Brokers in certain of its advertisements.

The Nassau County Commission on Human Rights agreed to place the following advertisements in newspapers:


Newsday, Aug 6, 1964

Not aware of the settlement, about 15 counter pickets showed up in front of the realtor's offices on Wednesday evening. Seeing no CORE pickets or crowd, and told that the dispute had been settled, they grew angry - not at CORE, but at Newsday, for having portrayed them in such a poor light.

So they made new signs, which said things like Hicksville Thanks Newsday For Its Slander, and they picketed for a while, but nobody cared. Their time in the spotlight was over.

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