Four who led civil-rights protest at Woolworth's are honored45 years later, four men who led protest at Woolworth's lunch counter are honored as civil rights pioneers BY MARTIN C. EVANS
STAFF WRITER
February 21, 2005
When he was 17 years old, Joseph McNeil, now of Hempstead, walked into a Woolworth's store in North Carolina with three other black college students, intent on asking for a slice of cherry pie.
Rather than serve them at a lunch counter reserved for white customers, a Woolworth's manager closed the store early that Feb. 1, 1960, day.
But McNeil and the others returned the next day and the next, angering some white customers, embarrassing some black employees, emboldening many fellow black students and eventually enlisting handfuls of white sympathizers.
"It was amazing," said McNeil, 62, who grew up in rural North Carolina and retired as a two-star general in the Air Force Reserve. "What it showed was there were thousands of young people who felt this was an evil and we had to do something about it."
On Tuesday, the North Carolina legislature passed a resolution honoring the "Greensboro Four" - including McNeil - for the bravery their actions showed. And this week, 45 years after what became known as the Greensboro Sit-ins, McNeil and other New York area residents who took part in the demonstrations paused to reflect on an event widely credited with having helped spark the student activism of the 1960s.