Lydia Tucker Arnold

By Nicholas Pasley

Lydia Tucker Arnold, known as Lydia Tucker at the time, was the secretary of student government at Clark College. During her senior year at Clark in February 1960, Tucker Arnold was invited to a meeting of student government officers of the Atlanta University Center institutions, where the intentions of fellow student activist Lonnie King were discussed.

According to Tucker Arnold in a video, this is where the idea of the Atlanta Student Movement was introduced to the people in attendance. Tucker Arnold thought that Lonnie King鈥檚 idea was 鈥渁bsolutely crazy鈥 but as he kept talking, she sparked an interest in it all because she 鈥渒new of the evilness that was going on at that time鈥ut not being able to sit at a lunch counter because your skin is black is just not right, does not make sense, so [she] wanted to be a part of eradicating that kind of foolishness.鈥

鈥ut not being able to sit at a lunch counter because your skin is black is just not right, does not make sense, so I wanted to be a part of eradicating that kind of foolishness. - Lydia Tucker Arnold

According to Tucker Arnold, the main goal of the Atlanta Student Movement was to 鈥渄estroy segregation in the city of Atlanta鈥 with regards to being able to sit at the lunch counters and enter establishments through the front door. Tucker Arnold was also a part of a boycott where they asked everyone to send their credit cards to them and to not shop. As an officer, she was a founding member of the Committee on Appeal for Human Rights.

In March 1960, she and other students participated in sit-ins. After participating in three sit-ins, she was arrested and stayed in jail for two weeks. She eventually served on Atlanta鈥檚 city council.