Robert Hayling

Robert Hayling
Born Robert Bagner Hayling
(1929-11-20)November 20, 1929
Tallahassee, Florida, U.S.
Died December 20, 2015(2015-12-20) (aged 86)
Fort Lauderdale, Florida
Residence Lauderhill, Florida; Cocoa, Florida; Saint Augustine, Florida; Tallahassee, Florida; Nashville, Tennessee;
Fields Dentist, Civil rights
Alma mater Florida A&M University
Known for St. Augustine Movement
Spouse Athea Wake

Robert Bagner Hayling (November 20, 1929 – December 20, 2015) was an American dentist, and civil rights activist.

Early life

Dr. Robert B. Hayling was born in Tallahassee, Florida to Charles C. Hayling, Sr., an academic who had a 33-year career at Florida A&M University, and Cleo Bagner Hayling. He and his three siblings all attended Florida A&M, in addition to receiving graduate education. In 1951, he was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Air Force, serving for four years, before moving to Nashville, Tennessee to study dentistry. He received a Doctor of Dental Surgery degree from Meharry Medical College School of Dentistry in 1960, where he first became involved in civil rights by participating in marches and lunch counter sit-ins.

Career

Dr. Hayling began his dental practice in St. Augustine,[1] becoming the first African-American dentist to be elected to the local, regional, and national components of the American Dental Association. He actively embraced the growing cause of civil rights, becoming the adult advisor to the Youth Council of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).

He led the group in protests against plans to celebrate St. Augustine's 400th birthday as the nation's oldest European settlement on an all-white basis. When Vice President Lyndon Johnson came to the city in 1963 to dedicate the first of the restored buildings on St. George Street, it was to be followed by a banquet for whites only at the city's famous Ponce de Leon Hotel. In tense negotiations, a small number of blacks were invited, in return for a promise not to picket the event. However, an agreement to have city officials listen to the concerns of the black community was not honored, leaving Hayling skeptical of promises from Washington politicians.

Hayling encouraged members of the youth council to participate in lunch counter sit-ins, which led to a group of them, known as "The St. Augustine Four" spending six months in jail and reform school. Parents of the students were promised a reprieve, only if they signed documents stating that Hayling had "contributed to the delinquency of minors," and further, if they agreed that their children would not participate in further civil rights activities. They refused.

Hayling and three companions--James Jackson, Clyde Jenkins, and James Hauser--were kidnapped and taken to a Ku Klux Klan rally in September, 1963, where they were seriously beaten and narrowly escaped death. They were then charged with assaulting the Ku Klux Klan. As he gained a reputation for militance, Hayling was threatened with the revocation of the group's charter by NAACP Executive Secretary Roy Wilkins during a phone conversation. Hayling replied "I will mail you your charter," vowing to continue his activities without the support of the NAACP.

During a conference in Orlando, Hayling met Martin Luther King, Jr. through the Rev. Charles Kenzie Steele, and became President of the Florida Branch of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. He invited King to St Augustine in the Spring of 1964, which was chosen as the battle ground for forcing the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Dr.Hayling issued a call to college students throughout the United States to come St. Augustine for Spring Break, not to go to the beach, but to take part in the demonstrations. [2] Mary Parkman Peabody, the mother of sitting Massachusetts Governor Endicott Peabody came with three other prominent Boston women at Easter, 1964 to aid of the activists. Peabody and Hayling were arrested for trying to order food at the segregated Ponce de Leon Motor Lodge Restaurant. Photographs of Peabody being arrested made international news and let the world know what was happening in St. Augustine.

When President Lyndon B. Johnson asked King, and other protesters for a two-week cessation period before the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was to be signed, Hayling refused; thus, forcing Johnson to hasten the signing of the bill, which took place on July 2, 1964.[3]

Dr. Hayling's dental practice in St. Augustine was destroyed because of his civil rights leadership, and in 1965 he moved to Cocoa Beach, helping other St. Augustine activists to find jobs when they could no longer be employed in the Ancient City. In the 1970s he moved to Fort Lauderdale, and practiced dentistry there until his retirement.

In 2003, the street where his home had been shot up in 1964 was renamed Dr. R. B. Hayling Place. In later years he was given the two highest awards of the city of St. Augustine: the De Aviles Award and the Order of La Florida, making him the most honored citizen in St. Augustine's history. He returned frequently, to participate in the groundbreaking for a museum at Fort Mose, to dedicate the monument in the downtown plaza to the Foot Soldiers of the Civil Rights Movement, to cut the ribbon for the opening of the first civil rights museum in the state of Florida on the 50th anniversary of the signing of the landmark Civil Rights Act of 1964. He was senior adviser to ACCORD, an organization founded in 2002 to honor the participants in the St. Augustine movement, and participated in the creation of a Freedom Trail of historic sites of the movement.

In 2014 he was inducted into the Florida Civil Rights Hall of Fame, along with A. Philip Randolph and James Weldon Johnson. A plaque honoring Dr. Hayling is on the wall just outside the governor's office in the Florida state capitol building in Tallahassee. During the induction ceremony, Hayling noted that, as a youngster, he used to mow the lawn at the Capitol.

Legacy and Honors

Dr. Hayling's early and steadfast leadership in the cause of civil rights in St. Augustine has been recognized in many ways. He was a 2012 Recipient of the Florida A&M University Distinguished Alumni Award; received a Doctor of Humane Letters from Florida Memorial University, and that school's Nathan W. Collier Meritorious Service Award "recognizing his courage, vision, fortitude, and service on behalf of mankind;" and was honored at the Florida Dental Association's convention in 2015. After his death, a memorial tribute was held in the rotunda of the state capitol building.

Hayling is written about in many books of civil rights history, by Taylor Branch, David Colburn, Deric Gilliard, Andrew Young, Ralph Abernathy, Dan Warren, and others. Before his death he was the outstanding surviving grassroots leader of the civil rights movement of the 1960s, frequently hailed as "the father of the Civil Rights Act of 1964."

References

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