Christine Givens Leads Protest of Police Abuse of Power in Cecil County
This writer, a retired professor at Washington College in Chestertown, recalls when the college’s student government association, in an exercise in open-mindedness, invited representatives from the Cecil County Klan to speak on the campus. The college administration immediately intervened, and the Klan didn’t appear.
To the best of my recollection, this happened in the early 1970s; however, as late as 2013, an imperial wizard of the Confederate White Knights spoke in a meeting at the Cecil County administration building in Elkton, and the town of Rising Sun was notorious for cross burnings and Confederate flags.
The website RoadSnacks lists Rising Sun as No. 4 among the 10 most racist municipalities in Maryland (as of 2016). This report analyzes the locations of historic Klan organizations from 1915 to 1940 divided by the number of people who currently live there. This writer is not totally convinced by their criteria, but since the results are in agreement with long-held local views, I believe it’s worth reporting.
Against this background, we now have the protests of activist Christine Givens. Givens’ parents lived next door to the Scott family, and she was eight years old when the bombing occurred. It is, no doubt, burned into her memory. Many of the African Americans with whom Givens grew up have left the county, but she is determined to remain and to raise her three children there.
“My purpose here is to show other little Black girls that you can stay here,” she says. “You can be from here and still absolutely live your dream. But when you grow up in an area like this, you’re always told you’ve got to keep quiet, even by your own people, because they’re afraid.”
Several hundred people marched for racial justice in Elkton on June 13, 2020, provoking hostility from passers-by. In July, Cecil Solidarity asked the police department to ban choke holds. The department rejected this request, declaring that officers can resort to any tactics they deemed necessary.
Threats from the White community to local Blacks caused Givens’ mother, Sharon Thompson, to ask her daughter to step back. That did not stop Givens, however, who led a protest last February outside the Cecil County sheriff’s department to protest the treatment of a Black motorist, Tyreke Collier, by sheriff’s deputies. Her parents also participated in that protest.
Witnesses saw Cpl. Bryan Shockey and two other officers pull the 30-year-old driver from the car and push him to the ground as he cried out, “I’m not resisting!” Shockey would later claim that Collier assaulted him and the county’s state’s attorney supported his claim. Nothing was done.
Sources:
https://www.roadsnacks.net/most-racist-cities-in-maryland/
A descendant of people once enslaved near Elkton, Christine Givens is college-educated and works in corporate communications. She helped to form the activist group, Cecil Solidarity, which is working for justice in the county. There will be more about Cecil Solidarity in a future edition of Common Sense Eastern Shore.
A native of Wicomico County, George Shivers holds a doctorate from the University of Maryland and taught in the Foreign Language Dept. of Washington College for 38 years before retiring in 2007. He is also very interested in the history and culture of the Eastern Shore, African American history in particular.
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