1958 Bethel Baptist Church bombing: Difference between revisions

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(New page: The '''1958 Bethel Baptist Church bombing''' was a racially motivated terrorist attack against Civil Rights Movement leader Fred Shuttlesworth's Bethel Baptist Church in [[Coll...)
 
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The bomb used consisted of 16 sticks of dynamite placed into a white 5-gallon paint bucket and left beside the church. Restaurant worker [[Laverne McWilliams]] noticed the smoking article on her way home from work. Thinking it was a fire, she alerted the Civil Rights guards, led by [[Colonel Stone Johnson]] who were standing watch from the porch of the deacon's house across the street. Johnson and others located the bomb and carried it to the street before it exploded.
The bomb used consisted of 16 sticks of dynamite placed into a white 5-gallon paint bucket and left beside the church. Restaurant worker [[Laverne McWilliams]] noticed the smoking article on her way home from work. Thinking it was a fire, she alerted the Civil Rights guards, led by [[Colonel Stone Johnson]] who were standing watch from the porch of the deacon's house across the street. Johnson and others located the bomb and carried it to the street before it exploded.


The shock wave from the explosion damaged windows and rattled cupboards for several blocks' radius. The church sustained minor damage as windows broke and light fixtures fell to the floor.
The shock wave from the explosion damaged windows and rattled cupboards for several blocks' radius. The church sustained minor damage as windows broke and light fixtures fell to the floor. A crater was left in the middle of [[28th Avenue North]].


[[J. B. Stoner]], a virulent white supremacist who would later organize the neo-Nazi [[National States Rights Party]], boasted in the presence of undercover investigators that he had organized the bombing. He was indicted in [[1977]] by a Birmingham grand jury at the request of [[Attorney General of Alabama]] [[Bill Baxley]] on charges of endangering life by placing a bomb near an occupied dwelling. Stoner fought extradition and claimed that he and others had rejected offers of thousands of dollars to bomb the church by [[Tom Cook]], whom he said was an FBI informant. Cook, a [[Birmingham Police Department]] detective, denied being an informant or offering any such bounties.
[[J. B. Stoner]], a virulent white supremacist demagogue, met with [[Birmingham Police Department]] detectives [[Tom Cook]] and [[G. L. Pattie]] before the bombing. The detectives expressed interest in contacting the men responsible for a [[Bombingham|string of bombings]] in the city and implied that they could provide financial support for future bombings in an effort to gain information. After the bombing, Stoner approached the two to claim credit for organizing the attack at Bethel and demanding a $2,000 payment. That evidence was ignored by police officials in [[Bull Connor]]'s administration and by the FBI under J. Edgar Hoover's command.


Stoner was extradited to Alabama for trial in [[1980]]. The jury convicted him and gave him a minimum sentence of 10 years. After three years of appeals failed, Stoner went on the lam for 5 months. He eventually served 3½ years in prison before being paroled.
Stoner was eventually indicted in September [[1977]] by a Birmingham grand jury at the request of [[Attorney General of Alabama]] [[Bill Baxley]]. The  charge was endangering life by placing a bomb near an occupied dwelling. Stoner fought extradition for three years, and was tried in May [[1980]]. Cook and Johnson testified for the prosecution. The defense put forth the theory that church members had set the bomb themselves to attract sympathy and donations. The jury of 11 whites and one African American found Stoner guilty and Judge [[Charles Crowder]] give him a minimal 10-year sentence. After three years of appeals failed, Stoner jumped bail and went on the lam for 4 months. He eventually served 3½ years of his 10-year sentence at the [[St Clair Correctional Facility]] before being paroled in November [[1986]].


==References==
==References==
* "[http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=hwNaAAAAIBAJ&sjid=R0sNAAAAIBAJ&pg=6822%2C4935130 Stoner Denies Charge]" (October 18, 1977) ''Waycross (Georgia) Journal-Herald''
* "[http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=hwNaAAAAIBAJ&sjid=R0sNAAAAIBAJ&pg=6822%2C4935130 Stoner Denies Charge]" (October 18, 1977) ''Waycross (Georgia) Journal-Herald''
* Mitchell, Louis D. (November 1978) "[http://books.google.com/books?id=exnkHesj3bAC Another Redemption: Baxley in Birmingham]" ''The Crisis''. Vol. 85, No. 9, pp. 311-17
* Mitchell, Louis D. (November 1978) "[http://books.google.com/books?id=exnkHesj3bAC Another Redemption: Baxley in Birmingham]" ''The Crisis''. Vol. 85, No. 9, pp. 311-17
* "[http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=YC8dAAAAIBAJ&sjid=Ap4EAAAAIBAJ&pg=6699%2C3021597 Photos item in Stoner trial]" (May 14, 1980) ''Tuscaloosa News''
* "[http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=ElpaAAAAIBAJ&sjid=m0wNAAAAIBAJ&pg=7011%2C1572778 Convicted Church-Bomber J. B. Stoner Released Early]" (November 10, 1986) ''Waycross (Georgia) Journal-Herald''
* Temple, Chanda & Jeff Hansen (July 16, 2000) "Ministers' homes, churches among bomb targets." ''Birmingham News''
* Temple, Chanda & Jeff Hansen (July 16, 2000) "Ministers' homes, churches among bomb targets." ''Birmingham News''
* {{McWhorter-2001}}
* {{McWhorter-2001}}
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[[Category:Civil rights events]]
[[Category:Civil rights events]]
[[Category:1958 events|Bethel Baptist Church bombing]]
[[Category:1958 events|Bethel Baptist Church bombing]]
[[Category:28th Avenue North]]

Revision as of 12:22, 20 January 2012

The 1958 Bethel Baptist Church bombing was a racially motivated terrorist attack against Civil Rights Movement leader Fred Shuttlesworth's Bethel Baptist Church in Collegeville on June 29, 1958. The bombing was the second in a string of three bomb attacks targeting the church.

The bomb used consisted of 16 sticks of dynamite placed into a white 5-gallon paint bucket and left beside the church. Restaurant worker Laverne McWilliams noticed the smoking article on her way home from work. Thinking it was a fire, she alerted the Civil Rights guards, led by Colonel Stone Johnson who were standing watch from the porch of the deacon's house across the street. Johnson and others located the bomb and carried it to the street before it exploded.

The shock wave from the explosion damaged windows and rattled cupboards for several blocks' radius. The church sustained minor damage as windows broke and light fixtures fell to the floor. A crater was left in the middle of 28th Avenue North.

J. B. Stoner, a virulent white supremacist demagogue, met with Birmingham Police Department detectives Tom Cook and G. L. Pattie before the bombing. The detectives expressed interest in contacting the men responsible for a string of bombings in the city and implied that they could provide financial support for future bombings in an effort to gain information. After the bombing, Stoner approached the two to claim credit for organizing the attack at Bethel and demanding a $2,000 payment. That evidence was ignored by police officials in Bull Connor's administration and by the FBI under J. Edgar Hoover's command.

Stoner was eventually indicted in September 1977 by a Birmingham grand jury at the request of Attorney General of Alabama Bill Baxley. The charge was endangering life by placing a bomb near an occupied dwelling. Stoner fought extradition for three years, and was tried in May 1980. Cook and Johnson testified for the prosecution. The defense put forth the theory that church members had set the bomb themselves to attract sympathy and donations. The jury of 11 whites and one African American found Stoner guilty and Judge Charles Crowder give him a minimal 10-year sentence. After three years of appeals failed, Stoner jumped bail and went on the lam for 4 months. He eventually served 3½ years of his 10-year sentence at the St Clair Correctional Facility before being paroled in November 1986.

References

  • "Stoner Denies Charge" (October 18, 1977) Waycross (Georgia) Journal-Herald
  • Mitchell, Louis D. (November 1978) "Another Redemption: Baxley in Birmingham" The Crisis. Vol. 85, No. 9, pp. 311-17
  • "Photos item in Stoner trial" (May 14, 1980) Tuscaloosa News
  • "Convicted Church-Bomber J. B. Stoner Released Early" (November 10, 1986) Waycross (Georgia) Journal-Herald
  • Temple, Chanda & Jeff Hansen (July 16, 2000) "Ministers' homes, churches among bomb targets." Birmingham News
  • McWhorter, Diane (2001) Carry Me Home: Birmingham, Alabama, The Climactic Battle of the Civil Rights Revolution. New York, New York: Simon and Schuster. ISBN 0743226488
  • Garrison, Greg (January 17, 2011) "Birmingham honors Colonel Stone Johnson's courage." Birmingham News