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It was 56 years ago that Jerome Smith, then 10 years old, removed the screen that separated the white and black passengers on a New Orleans streetcar. "The streetcar became very hostile," Smith recalls. Smith remembers an older black woman from the rear of the car descended upon him, hitting him so hard that "it felt like there was a bell ringing in my head." The woman told the bus she'd teach the boy a lesson, telling him, "You should never do that, disrespect white people. You have no business trying to sit with them." She forced Smith off the streetcar, and around the back of an auto store. But once they were behind the building, the woman's tone changed. "Never, ever stop," the woman told Smith as she began to cry. "I'm proud of you," she said. "Don't you ever quit." The event took place five years before Rosa Parks energized the civil rights movement on Dec. 1, 1955, when she refused to give up her bus seat to a white passenger in Montgomery, AL. Smith, who went on to help found the New Orleans chapter of CORE, The Congress of Racial Equality, says it was that moment that made him who he is today.
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Piece Description
It was 56 years ago that Jerome Smith, then 10 years old, removed the screen that separated the white and black passengers on a New Orleans streetcar. "The streetcar became very hostile," Smith recalls. Smith remembers an older black woman from the rear of the car descended upon him, hitting him so hard that "it felt like there was a bell ringing in my head." The woman told the bus she'd teach the boy a lesson, telling him, "You should never do that, disrespect white people. You have no business trying to sit with them." She forced Smith off the streetcar, and around the back of an auto store. But once they were behind the building, the woman's tone changed. "Never, ever stop," the woman told Smith as she began to cry. "I'm proud of you," she said. "Don't you ever quit." The event took place five years before Rosa Parks energized the civil rights movement on Dec. 1, 1955, when she refused to give up her bus seat to a white passenger in Montgomery, AL. Smith, who went on to help found the New Orleans chapter of CORE, The Congress of Racial Equality, says it was that moment that made him who he is today.
Broadcast History
NPR' s Morning Edition, December 1, 2006
Transcript
JS: My father was on the street car here, and he took the screen down that separated the blacks from the whites, put it in the middle of the floor. Some months later I did the same thing, and I uh put the screen down, took a seat, and the street car became very hostile. And an old black woman came from the back and slapped me aside my head, felt like there was a bell ringing in my head, and she said, 'I'm gonna fix him for disrespecting these white folks you should never do that, disrespect white people you have no business trying to sit with them.' And she told them 'I'm 'a take him home' an she pushed me down as I was trying to get off the street car and she came behind me and she took me behind a auto store on St. Bernard and St. Claude. And this was the moment, this was the moment that make me stand like I stand today. She told me never ever stop. She started crying. She hugged...
Read the full transcript
Intro and Outro
INTRO:Fifty-one years ago, Rosa Parks refused to give her bus seat to a white passenger. Today for STORYCORPS, the oral history project takes us back to that era. Several years before Rosa Parks took her stand, JEROME SMITH was living
in New Orleans. He was ten years old. Here, Jerome Smith recalls an experience from his childhood that still shapes him today.
[TAPE]
OUTRO:Jerome Smith, in a StoryCorps MOBILE booth in New Orleans. Smith went on to become a civil rights activist. Today, he teaches young people about getting involved in politics. Jerome Smith's interview at StoryCorps -- along with all the others --
is archived at the Library of Congress.Learn how YOU can participate at NPR-dot-ORG.





