11/29/2025
Memory shared with me by Mrs. Peggy Parks Miller, the grand niece of Scottsboro Boy, Mr. Clarence Norris.
November 29, 1976, Norris returned to Montgomery to receive his pardon and a hero's welcome. Attorney Donald Watkins writes, “When Norris exited the airplane, we just stared at each other until he reached me in the sea of reporters and supporters from around the world. Then, we hugged and cried. Both of us realized the magnitude of the moment-on this historic day, the state of Alabama had finally and officially declared that the Scottsboro Boys were innocent of the 1931 r**e charges".
An excerpt from an article written by attorney Donald V. Watkins. As we commemorate this day 49 years later, let us remember the words of Clarence Norris: "The lesson to Black People, to my children, to everybody is that you should always fight for your rights, even if it cost you your life. Stand up for your rights, even if it kills you. That's all that life consists of."
His words still are still applicable for today.
Video in this post filmed on June 14, 2025 in Decatur, Alabama. Attorney General Bill Baxley is showing a photo celebrating Governor Wallace’s pardon of Clarence Norris that was taken on November 29, 1976.