in 1963. McKissick stands at the far left. After the Greensboro sit-in at Woolworth's lunch counter on February 1, 1960, Gordon Carey and
James T. McCain,
CORE (Congress of Racial Equality) field secretaries, were sent to the Carolinas to help with the negotiating of department store owners and to spark interest in more sit-ins. Carey was introduced to McKissick during this time. "Carey helped McKissick and students organize the demonstrations that broke out on February 8 in Durham, and in the course of the next few weeks the two men travelled over the state setting up non-violent workshops." McKissick handled legal affairs for both the NAACP and CORE, but he withdrew from the NAACP. After leaving the NAACP and showing loyalty to CORE, he was elected to the CORE national chairmanship at the 1963 Convention. CORE executive director
James Farmer was under arrest at the time of the 1963 civil rights
March on Washington for participating in protests in Louisiana, so McKissick attended the demonstration on his behalf. He delivered an address to the attendees originally prepared for Farmer, exhorting the audience to "play well your roles in your struggle for freedom. In the thousands of communities in which you have come throughout the land, act with valor and dignity, and act without fear." He also participated in a meeting between national civil rights leaders and President
John F. Kennedy that day on Farmer's behalf. McKissick replaced Farmer as head of CORE on January 3, 1966. McKissick stated, "We issued the call to bring all the organizations together to continue the march at the spot where he fell." On the 17th day of their march, the protestors stopped in
Canton, Mississippi and attempted to establish a camp for the night at a school. Local officials objected to their attempt to camp at the school, and dozens of state police officers were dispatched to confront the crowd. McKissick stood aboard a truck and attempted to rally the protestors to continue their demonstration, the police attacked, firing tear gas canisters and striking the protestors as they fled. Struck by a gas canister, McKissick lost his balance and fell off the truck, injuring his back. Following the incident, McKissick became a vocal supporter of
black power, declaring that nonviolence had "outlived its usefulness" and that the civil rights movement was "dead". McKissick's embrace of the black power movement and the subsequent perceived radicalization of CORE led to the resignation of many of the organization's white members and caused the Federal Bureau of Investigation to monitor McKissick. McKissick and
Roy Innis, who at that time was the head of the Harlem chapter of CORE, appeared to be close allies, but there were underlying tensions. When McKissick left CORE in 1968, Innis took over. He became more strident in his rejection of nonviolence after
Martin Luther King Jr. was
assassinated, telling a journalist, "The next Negro to advocate nonviolence should be torn to bits by black people." In 1969, he published a book,
3/5ths of a man, which urged white people to accept political equality with minorities at the threat of violent revolution. He also stressed the importance of black economic autonomy from white society, arguing that, "Unless the Black Man attains economic independence, any 'political independence' will be an illusion". He promoted involvement in business as a means of enriching American blacks, which he termed "black entrepreneurship" and "black socialism". ==Soul City==