On 25 February 1946, civil unrest broke out in the state of Tennessee, which went down in history as the "Columbia Race Riot". The mother of James Stevenson, an Afro-American veteran of the US Navy, took a botched radio to the workshop of John Calhoun Fleming, who sold it by mistake. The owner's son, a white American Billy Fleming, insulted the woman instead of an apology and hit James in the face, Stevenson fought back. The owner of the workshop accused Stevenson of attempted murder.

Vigilantes started to gather on the square, many were armed and threatened with death for the entire black population. Black citizens armed themselves as well. The Whites started shooting while driving around the city, the Blacks returned fire, and four of the vigilantes were wounded. Then two Afro-Americans were killed. Units of the National Guard were brought to the city. The police presented the killings as “stopping escape attempts while being escorted to prison”. No whites were charged, while one hundred blacks were detained and twenty-five were charged with attempted murder.

The accused ones were defended at the trial by African American Thurgood Marshall. As a result, the jury, consisted of whites only, acquitted all except for two people, and the charges against Stevenson and his mother were dropped. The current National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) played a significant role in the investigation. This is the only organisation in the United States that uses the word “colored” as a reminder, that`s considered to be completely unacceptable nowadays. Lawyer Thurgood Marshall later became the first black judge of the US Supreme Court.

The Second World War pointed out racial issues in the United States. Blacks fought side by side with whites and unwilled to put up with powerlessness; moreover, it was contrary to the United States Constitution, while the authors of "racial theory" were tried for crimes against humanity in Nuremberg.

Source: The Daily Herald, February 26, 1946