Skip to main content
Back to Show
Democracy Now!

60 Years Ago: Police Attack Children's Crusade with Dogs and Water Cannons in Birmingham, Alabama

This clip is from the May 2, 2023 broadcast.

Sixty years ago today is known as "D-Day" in Birmingham, Alabama, when thousands of children began a 10-week-long series of protests against segregation that became known as the Children's Crusade. Hundreds were arrested. The next day, "Double D-Day," the local head of the police, Bull Connor, ordered his white police force to begin using high-pressure fire hoses and dogs to attack the children. One photograph captured the moment when a white police officer allowed a large German shepherd dog to attack a young Black boy. Four months after the protests began, the Ku Klux Klan bombed a Black Birmingham church, killing four young girls — Addie Mae Collins, Carole Robertson, Cynthia Wesley and Denise McNair. Revisit the history of the Children's Crusade with two guests: civil rights activist Janice Kelsey, who joined the Children's Crusade as a 16-year-old in 1963, and author Paul Kix.

Support Provided By