South Carolina 2025-2026 Regular Session

South Carolina House Bill H4372 Compare Versions

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11 South Carolina General Assembly126th Session, 2025-2026
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33 Bill 4372
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55 Indicates Matter StrickenIndicates New Matter
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77 (Text matches printed bills. Document has been reformatted to meet World Wide Web specifications.)
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99 A house RESOLUTION TO COMMEND CECIL J. WILLIAMS OF ORANGEBURG COUNTY FOR FOUNDING THE SOUTH CAROLINA CIVIL RIGHTS MUSEUM, WHICH DISPLAYS HIS PHOTOGRAPHS CHRONICLING THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT IN SOUTH CAROLINA, AND TO CONGRATULATE HIM ON THE UPCOMING EXPANSION OF THE MUSEUM'S FOOTPRINT AS PART OF THE RAILROAD CORNER DOWNTOWN REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT. Whereas, the House of Representatives is honored to recognize photographer Cecil J. Williams of Orangeburg County for his efforts to ensure that South Carolina's role in the Civil Rights Movement receives accurate recognition. Born on November 26, 1937, when state laws forced racial segregation, Cecil Williams began to photograph social issues facing his community and State as a youth. His work first appeared in Jet Magazine and other Black publications, and later in national news outlets; and Whereas, for two decades, he chronicled the Civil Rights Movement in South Carolina, beginning with images of courageous Clarendon County residents who challenged public school segregation in the Briggs v. Elliott lawsuit, to include photographs of Harry and Eliza Briggs, the Reverend J.A. DeLaine, who helped shepherd the litigation, and an iconic image of their attorney, Thurgood Marshall. The first of five cases filed challenging racial segregation in public schools, the lawsuit would be decided as part of the landmark 1954 Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka case in which the United States Supreme Court declared public school racial segregation unconstitutional; and Whereas, he continued to make a record of the state's role in the Civil Rights Movement in the 1950s with images showcasing ordinary individuals speaking truth to power, such as a photograph of Black Orangeburg residents boycotting local businesses that had retaliated against fellow citizens for petitioning to desegregate the Orangeburg public schools based on the Brown decision. This boycott preceded the more well-known Montgomery, Alabama, bus boycott by several months; and Whereas, his pictorial chronicle of the 1960s was wide-ranging, beginning in February 1960 on the heels of the first Greensboro, North Carolina, lunch counter sit-in, when he documented attempted small-scale sit-ins by Claflin and S.C. State students at the local Kress and accompanying marches, and on March 15, 1960, what would be the largest student-led peaceful demonstration at that time nationwide, in which first responders used fire hoses and tear gas on the 1,000 student demonstrators, of whom hundreds were arrested and confined outdoors in rainy, cold weather at the county jail known as the Pink Palace. A photograph of the students singing behind the fence, taken by Cecil Williams, appeared on the front page of The New York Times the following day; and Whereas, wanting to correct the narrative of our state's overlooked role in the Civil Rights Movement, in 2019, Cecil Williams, and his wife, Barbara, and sister, Brenda, opened the South Carolina Civil Rights Museum, using personal funds, to showcase many of his photographs and other memorabilia. In the coming months, the museum will move into a substantially larger space at Railroad Corner in downtown Orangeburg, expanding the museum's footprint to a more historically significant location for educating others about South Carolina's role in the Civil Rights Movement, a story captured almost singlehandedly by Cecil Williams and his cameras. Now, therefore, Be it resolved by the House of Representatives: That the members of the South Carolina House of Representatives, by this resolution, commend Cecil J. Williams of Orangeburg County for founding the South Carolina Civil Rights Museum, which displays his photographs chronicling the Civil Rights Movement in South Carolina, and to congratulate him on the upcoming expansion of the museum's footprint as part of the Railroad Corner downtown redevelopment project. Be it further resolved that a copy of this resolution be presented to Cecil J. Williams. ----XX----
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1111 A house RESOLUTION
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1313 TO COMMEND CECIL J. WILLIAMS OF ORANGEBURG COUNTY FOR FOUNDING THE SOUTH CAROLINA CIVIL RIGHTS MUSEUM, WHICH DISPLAYS HIS PHOTOGRAPHS CHRONICLING THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT IN SOUTH CAROLINA, AND TO CONGRATULATE HIM ON THE UPCOMING EXPANSION OF THE MUSEUM'S FOOTPRINT AS PART OF THE RAILROAD CORNER DOWNTOWN REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT.
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1515 Whereas, the House of Representatives is honored to recognize photographer Cecil J. Williams of Orangeburg County for his efforts to ensure that South Carolina's role in the Civil Rights Movement receives accurate recognition. Born on November 26, 1937, when state laws forced racial segregation, Cecil Williams began to photograph social issues facing his community and State as a youth. His work first appeared in Jet Magazine and other Black publications, and later in national news outlets; and
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1717 Whereas, for two decades, he chronicled the Civil Rights Movement in South Carolina, beginning with images of courageous Clarendon County residents who challenged public school segregation in the Briggs v. Elliott lawsuit, to include photographs of Harry and Eliza Briggs, the Reverend J.A. DeLaine, who helped shepherd the litigation, and an iconic image of their attorney, Thurgood Marshall. The first of five cases filed challenging racial segregation in public schools, the lawsuit would be decided as part of the landmark 1954 Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka case in which the United States Supreme Court declared public school racial segregation unconstitutional; and
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1919 Whereas, he continued to make a record of the state's role in the Civil Rights Movement in the 1950s with images showcasing ordinary individuals speaking truth to power, such as a photograph of Black Orangeburg residents boycotting local businesses that had retaliated against fellow citizens for petitioning to desegregate the Orangeburg public schools based on the Brown decision. This boycott preceded the more well-known Montgomery, Alabama, bus boycott by several months; and
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2121 Whereas, his pictorial chronicle of the 1960s was wide-ranging, beginning in February 1960 on the heels of the first Greensboro, North Carolina, lunch counter sit-in, when he documented attempted small-scale sit-ins by Claflin and S.C. State students at the local Kress and accompanying marches, and on March 15, 1960, what would be the largest student-led peaceful demonstration at that time nationwide, in which first responders used fire hoses and tear gas on the 1,000 student demonstrators, of whom hundreds were arrested and confined outdoors in rainy, cold weather at the county jail known as the Pink Palace. A photograph of the students singing behind the fence, taken by Cecil Williams, appeared on the front page of The New York Times the following day; and
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2323 Whereas, wanting to correct the narrative of our state's overlooked role in the Civil Rights Movement, in 2019, Cecil Williams, and his wife, Barbara, and sister, Brenda, opened the South Carolina Civil Rights Museum, using personal funds, to showcase many of his photographs and other memorabilia. In the coming months, the museum will move into a substantially larger space at Railroad Corner in downtown Orangeburg, expanding the museum's footprint to a more historically significant location for educating others about South Carolina's role in the Civil Rights Movement, a story captured almost singlehandedly by Cecil Williams and his cameras. Now, therefore,
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2525 Be it resolved by the House of Representatives:
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2727 That the members of the South Carolina House of Representatives, by this resolution, commend Cecil J. Williams of Orangeburg County for founding the South Carolina Civil Rights Museum, which displays his photographs chronicling the Civil Rights Movement in South Carolina, and to congratulate him on the upcoming expansion of the museum's footprint as part of the Railroad Corner downtown redevelopment project.
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2929 Be it further resolved that a copy of this resolution be presented to Cecil J. Williams.
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3131 ----XX----
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3333 This web page was last updated on April 23, 2025 at 01:58 PM