Civil Rights

Sheriff’s Deputies in Gadsden, Alabama, Use Cattle Prods to Torture Civil Rights Demonstrators

On June 18, 1963, law enforcement officers in Gadsden, Alabama, deployed electric cattle prods against hundreds of Black civil rights protesters during a major sit-in campaign against segregation. In total, more than 450 demonstrators were arrested that day. The protests in Gadsden had been building since the fall of 1962, when small groups of young Black residents began organizing sit-ins and picket lines. Their goals were to challenge segregated public facilities and combat the systematic suppression of Black voters. These nonviolent actions steadily gained momentum and continued into 1963, prompting local authorities to obtain a court injunction banning sit-in demonstrations.

Law enforcement officers in Gadsden, Alabama, used electric cattle prods on and arrested over 450 Black protesters who were holding a sit-in to oppose segregation. June 18th, 1963.
Law enforcement officers in Gadsden, Alabama, used electric cattle prods and arrested over 450 Black protesters who were holding a sit-in to oppose segregation: June 18th, 1963.

On the day of the crackdown, police arrested roughly 200 protesters who were staging a sit-in at a downtown store. Another 250 were detained after they lay down in front of the county courthouse. The demonstrators offered no physical resistance as officers loaded them into patrol wagons and transported them to the county jail.

Despite their peaceful compliance, many of the activists — including several children — were subjected to severe abuse during the journey. Sheriff’s deputies repeatedly shocked them with the electrified ends of cattle prods, targeting sensitive areas such as their bare feet, necks, stomachs, and genitals. Witnesses reported that some officers appeared to take sadistic pleasure in the violence. Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) activist Prathia Hall later recalled the brutality, writing that “In Alabama, there was a sadistic kind of joy in inflicting pain.”

This incident marked the first documented large-scale use of cattle prods by Southern police against civil rights demonstrators. The weapon quickly became a notorious emblem of violent white resistance to the broader movement for racial equality across the South. In the weeks and months that followed, Gadsden authorities continued to employ cattle prods against activists who persisted in their efforts to desegregate the city, despite the ongoing risk of physical harm.

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