-40%

1974 Civil Rights Tyrone Guyton Age 14 MURDERED BY POLICE BRUTALITY Protest PIN

$ 26.37

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Condition: SEE PHOTOS FOR CONDITION. IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS, PLEASE CONTACT ME BEFORE BIDDING OR BUYING
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted

    Description

    THIS LISTING BEGAN ON FEBRUARY 6, 2021 AND
    WILL END WITHIN  30 DAYS
    ,
    ON OR BEFORE  MARCH 5, 2021,
    IF THE ITEM IS NOT SOLD
    OFFERED FOR SALE IS THIS
    1 3/4 INCH CELLULOID PINBACK BUTTON
    IN WHAT I BELIEVE TO BE REALLY GREAT SHAPE.
    HOWEVER, THAT IS JUST MY OPINION.  SEE PHOTOS FOR CONDITION, AND YOU BE THE JUDGE.
    IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS, PLEASE CONTACT ME BEFORE BIDDING OR BUYING.
    RETURNS ARE NOT ACCEPTED UNLESS THE ITEM IS NOT AS DESCRIBED OR SHOWN IN THE PHOTOS OR HAS SIGNIFICANT DAMAGE OR DEFECTS  NOT VISIBLE IN THE PHOTOS OR OTHERWISE DESCRIBED.
    GUARANTEED AUTHENTIC AND ORIGINAL AS DESCRIBED
    .
    Check out my other Political and Social Protest and Cause items!
    This Pin was issued and sold
    circa
    1974
    to raise funds and support for the effort to
    indict the officers of the
    Emeryville Police Department near Oakland California, who
    murdered Tyrone Guyton,
    an
    unarmed 14-year-old black child.
    The police lied and claimed Tyrone shot at them with a pistol, but no gun was ever found, and tests failed to show he had fired a gun.  Police officers were not prosecuted.
    The pin reads:
    TYRONE GUYTON  HAD A RIGHT TO LIVE    JUSTICE
    Details of Tyrone Guyton’s 1973 Murder by the Police
    According to news reports, on the night of
    November 1, 1973
    , undercover Emeryville detectives were staking out a club on San Pablo Avenue. They reportedly observed Guyton “tinkering” with and then entering a presumably stolen vehicle. A
    high-speed pursuit
    ensued with two
    Emeryville Detectives driving unmarked vehicles
    . They caught up to and
    rammed the car Guyton was driving
    disabling it near 33rd and West Street
    in Oakland
    a block from Guyton’s home.
    According to the police
    , a foot-chase ensued and
    Guyton fired two shots
    “from a small caliber pistol” in the officers’ direction. The two
    detectives both discharged their weapons at Guyton
    with one
    hitting him in the back
    and disabling him. Guyton was
    struck a second time while on the ground
    by a joining officer who
    claimed he saw Guyton reaching for a gun
    .
    No weapon, bullets or casings were ever found at the scene
    . Then Emeryville Police Chief James Donovan, claimed that the gun was likely picked up by someone in the crowd that had gathered around the crime scene.
    ATF tests failed to prove Guyton had discharged a weapon.
    County Grand Jury Refuses to Indict Officers
    A week later, a grand jury refused to indict the three officers citing a lack of evidence. Emeryville police detectives Dale Phillips, Thomas Mierky and officer William Matthews apparently all invoked their 5th amendment rights.
    Presiding Superior court judge
    Lionel J. Wilson publicly
    called upon the Alameda County District Attorney Lowell Jensen to prosecute the case,
    but he refused to act. (Wilson went on to become Oakland’s first Black mayor four years later). The Grand Jury later reopened the case but the results were the same.
    Unsatisfied with the verdict, Guyon’s mother Mattie Guyton Shepherd and other family members along with
    Black community leaders
    began organizing to get the answers they deserved and bring justice for Tyrone. The
    Black Panther Party
    (BPP), active since 1966, joined the cause by publicizing, helping coordinate rallies and providing a meeting space at their East Oakland Learning Center.
    This underground pinback button pin or badge relates to the Hippie (or Hippy ) Counterculture Movement of the psychedelic Sixties (1960s and Seventies (1970s).  That movement included such themes and topics as peace, protest, civil rights, radical, socialist, communist, anarchist, union labor strikes, drugs, marijuana, pot, weed, lsd, acid, sds, iww, anti draft, anti war, anti rotc, welfare rights, poverty, equal rights, integration, gay, women's rights, black panthers, black power, left wing, liberal, etc.  progressive political movement and is guaranteed to be genuine as described.
    THIS IS
    MY HOBBY AND IS NOT A BUSINESS
    .  THIS AND OTHER ITEMS I LIST ON EBAY ARE FROM MY PERSONAL COLLECTIONS AND WERE NOT INITIALLY ACQUIRED BY ME FOR RESALE.  PROCEEDS GO TO BUY OTHER STUFF I AM INTERESTED IN COLLECTING AT THIS MOMENT, AND THEREBY AMOUNTING TO A TRADE OF ITEMS.
    I HAVE BEEN A LONG TIME MEMBER OF
    A. P. I .C. (AMERICAN POLITICAL ITEMS COLLECTORS)
    .  IF YOU ARE NOT A MEMBER, YOU SHOULD CONSIDER JOINING.
    IT IS A GREAT ORGANIZATION!
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    please wait to pay!
    THANK YOU FOR YOUR INTEREST
    The Deacons emerged as one of the first visible self-defense forces in the South and as such represented a new face of the
    civil rights
    movement.  Traditional civil rights organizations remained silent on them or repudiated their activities.  They were effective however in providing protection for local African Americans who sought to register to vote and for white and black civil rights workers in the area.  The Deacons, for example, provided security for the 1966 March Against Fear from Memphis to Jackson,
    Mississippi
    .  Moreover their presence in Southeastern Louisiana meant that the Klan would no longer be able to intimidate and terrorize local African Americans without challenge.
    The strategy and methods that the Deacons employed attracted the attention and concern of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), which authorized an investigation into the group’s activities. The investigation stalled, however, when more influential black power organizations such as US and the
    Black Panther Party
    emerged after the
    1965 Watts Riot
    .  With public attention, and the attention of the FBI focused elsewhere, the Deacons lost most of their notoriety and slowly declined in influence.  By 1968 they were all but extinct.  In 2003 the activities of the Deacons was the subject of a 2003, “Deacons for Defense.” - See more at: HTTPS://www.blackpast.org/aah/deacons-defense-and-justice#sthash.s6D3h3ZZ.dpuf
    On July 10, 1964, a group of African American men in Jonesboro,
    Louisiana
    led by Earnest “Chilly Willy” Thomas and Frederick Douglas Kirkpatrick founded the group known as The Deacons for Defense and Justice to protect members of the
    Congress of Racial Equality (CORE)
    against Ku Klux Klan violence.  Most of the “Deacons” were veterans of
    World War II
    and the
    Korean War
    . The Jonesboro chapter organized its first affiliate chapter in nearby Bogalusa, Louisiana led by Charles Sims, A.Z. Young and Robert Hicks. Eventually they organized a third chapter in Louisiana. The Deacons tense confrontation with the Klan in Bogalusa was crucial in forcing the federal government to intervene on behalf of the local African American community.  The national attention they garnered also persuaded state and national officials to initiate efforts to neutralize the Klan in that area of the Deep South.
    The Deacons emerged as one of the first visible self-defense forces in the South and as such represented a new face of the
    civil rights
    movement.  Traditional civil rights organizations remained silent on them or repudiated their activities.  They were effective however in providing protection for local African Americans who sought to register to vote and for white and black civil rights workers in the area.  The Deacons, for example, provided security for the 1966 March Against Fear from Memphis to Jackson,
    Mississippi
    .  Moreover their presence in Southeastern Louisiana meant that the Klan would no longer be able to intimidate and terrorize local African Americans without challenge.
    The strategy and methods that the Deacons employed attracted the attention and concern of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), which authorized an investigation into the group’s activities. The investigation stalled, however, when more influential black power organizations such as US and the
    Black Panther Party
    emerged after the
    1965 Watts Riot
    .  With public attention, and the attention of the FBI focused elsewhere, the Deacons lost most of their notoriety and slowly declined in influence.  By 1968 they were all but extinct.  In 2003 the activities of the Deacons was the subject of a 2003, “Deacons for Defense.” - See more at: HTTPS://www.blackpast.org/aah/deacons-defense-and-justice#sthash.s6D3h3ZZ.dpuf
    On July 10, 1964, a group of African American men in Jonesboro,
    Louisiana
    led by Earnest “Chilly Willy” Thomas and Frederick Douglas Kirkpatrick founded the group known as The Deacons for Defense and Justice to protect members of the
    Congress of Racial Equality (CORE)
    against Ku Klux Klan violence.  Most of the “Deacons” were veterans of
    World War II
    and the
    Korean War
    . The Jonesboro chapter organized its first affiliate chapter in nearby Bogalusa, Louisiana led by Charles Sims, A.Z. Young and Robert Hicks. Eventually they organized a third chapter in Louisiana. The Deacons tense confrontation with the Klan in Bogalusa was crucial in forcing the federal government to intervene on behalf of the local African American community.  The national attention they garnered also persuaded state and national officials to initiate efforts to neutralize the Klan in that area of the Deep South.
    The Deacons emerged as one of the first visible self-defense forces in the South and as such represented a new face of the
    civil rights
    movement.  Traditional civil rights organizations remained silent on them or repudiated their activities.  They were effective however in providing protection for local African Americans who sought to register to vote and for white and black civil rights workers in the area.  The Deacons, for example, provided security for the 1966 March Against Fear from Memphis to Jackson,
    Mississippi
    .  Moreover their presence in Southeastern Louisiana meant that the Klan would no longer be able to intimidate and terrorize local African Americans without challenge.
    The strategy and methods that the Deacons employed attracted the attention and concern of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), which authorized an investigation into the group’s activities. The investigation stalled, however, when more influential black power organizations such as US and the
    Black Panther Party
    emerged after the
    1965 Watts Riot
    .  With public attention, and the attention of the FBI focused elsewhere, the Deacons lost most of their notoriety and slowly declined in influence.  By 1968 they were all but extinct.  In 2003 the activities of the Deacons was the subject of a 2003, “Deacons for Defense.” - See more at: HTTPS://www.blackpast.org/aah/deacons-defense-and-justice#sthash.s6D3h3ZZ.dpuf
    On July 10, 1964, a group of African American men in Jonesboro,
    Louisiana
    led by Earnest “Chilly Willy” Thomas and Frederick Douglas Kirkpatrick founded the group known as The Deacons for Defense and Justice to protect members of the
    Congress of Racial Equality (CORE)
    against Ku Klux Klan violence.  Most of the “Deacons” were veterans of
    World War II
    and the
    Korean War
    . The Jonesboro chapter organized its first affiliate chapter in nearby Bogalusa, Louisiana led by Charles Sims, A.Z. Young and Robert Hicks. Eventually they organized a third chapter in Louisiana. The Deacons tense confrontation with the Klan in Bogalusa was crucial in forcing the federal government to intervene on behalf of the local African American community.  The national attention they garnered also persuaded state and national officials to initiate efforts to neutralize the Klan in that area of the Deep South. - See more at: HTTPS://www.blackpast.org/aah/deacons-defense-and-justice#sthash.s6D3h3ZZ.dpuf