Watts Restaurant and Grill
Watts Restaurant and Grill was a restaurant operating in Chapel Hill, Orange County, North Carolina throughout the 1950s and 60s. The restaurant shared the property with a motel, which operated under the same name.
Watts Restaurant was founded in the early 1950s by Austin and Jeppie Watts. In the 1950s and 1960s, Watts Grill became a popular venue for the KKK, as well as students and fraternity organizations from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Fraternities such as Lambda Chi Alpha, Chi Phi, and Delta Kappa Epsilon, among others, would visit Watts Grill during pledge week and frequently host parties there. Despite the restaurant's growing popularity, the Wattses remained adamant in their ways and refused to serve any Black clientele.
Civil Rights Protests
Background
In the 1960s, Chapel Hill was a small college town in the midst of the civil rights movement. While the town had a reputation for being liberal, about a quarter of Chapel Hill's institutions were still segregated. In 1963, sit-in campaigns were organized all around the town to attempt to convince the local businesses to integrate. These events led to the arrest of over 200 students from local high schools and UNC Chapel Hill.The Sit-Ins
On January 2, a group of six individuals entered Watts Restaurant, wanting to be served food. This group of demonstrators consisted of several Black students from Lincoln High School including Carolyn Edwards, Mae Black, and Stella Farrar, as well as Jerdene Alston and James Foushee, both of whom attended North Carolina Central University. Two white students from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill accompanied these individuals, Van Cornelius and senior, Lou Calhoun. After being denied service, the students laid down in an act of protest and refused to leave the restaurant. In response, Jeppie Watts urinated on both Lou Calhoun and James Foushee. The aftermath of this was captured by UNC professor, Al Amon, who joined the group as their photographer. The police were called and all of the demonstrators were arrested for criminal trespassing, while the Wattses received no charges.The following day, January 3, a group of professors and students from UNC and Duke, organized by the Chapel Hill Freedom Committee, attempted another sit in. The group was composed of five white professors from Duke, two white professors from UNC, and four students. The Duke professors included Peter Klopfer, David Smith, Frederick Herzog, Harmon Smith, and Robert Osborn. The professors from UNC, William Wynn and Albert Amon, arrived at Watts "determined to be arrested." The students, all from UNC, included three Black protestors and one white protestor: Tom Bynum, Ben Spaulding, Quinton Baker, and John Dunne. The group did not enter Watts, as they were stopped in the parking lot by restaurant staff. During this encounter, the protestors were sprayed with hoses and beaten until the police department arrived, who ultimately arrested the individuals for trespassing.
Throughout the spring of that year, trials were held for many of the demonstrators involved in the sit-ins. Several protestors were found guilty of criminal trespassing and sentenced to several months in jail. The severity of the sentences of the demonstrators were later reduced by Terry Sanford.