Jackson is the lone survivor among the four victims of the 1963 Klan beating. He’s no longer the feisty young activist who, with his head bandaged shortly after the rally, drove Hayling’s Volkswagen convertible with the top down around and around the Plaza to show, as he said in a recent interview, “You may have beat me, but you have not run me off.”
In his adult years, Jackson worked for Southern Bell as a phone repairman, encountering racism on some service calls, kindness on others. He very rarely spoke about his ordeal with the Klan in public. But in recent years, particularly with the advent of the Black Lives Matter movement, he started speaking up again to local media. An article appeared last month in the St. Augustine Record, accompanied by a video recorded a few years prior.
In Louisiana, Irv Cheney’s daughter Joy Hammatt stumbled upon the video after reading an online article story that mentioned the Klan incident. She had known about Hayling but didn’t know Jackson’s name and was startled to see that one of the Klan victims was still alive. On a whim, she contacted the Record and got Jackson’s phone number. He was stunned to hear from her. Hammatt shared with Jackson what she knew about the story. Then she made another call.
“Dad,” she began, “I really hope you’re not going to be angry at me.”
The phone call
Two days later, Cheney dialed Jackson’s number. It was the first time the two men had ever spoken. Almost 60 years had passed since fate had cast them together.
The call sent them careening back to a painful time and place. An old Black man and an older White man tried to grapple with their own piece of complicated history.
They spoke for half an hour, sharing their perspectives on that fateful night, and a little bit about their journeys since.
For Jackson, the conversation snapped some puzzle pieces together. He now believes that Sheriff Davis was likely at the rally the whole time and interceded only after news of Cheney’s phone calls had been radioed to him.
“I believe that man would have let those people kill us,” Jackson told The Post a few days later.
Even a few days after the fact, Jackson was still amazed to see Cheney resurface in his life. “I’d always wondered who that individual was to go and make that call to the Sheriff’s Department,” Jackson said.
Jackson thanked Cheney “very dearly.” If not for Cheney, he said, “I would not be alive today.”
For his part, Cheney said, the call “gave me goose bumps,” and “it seemed so strange to return to that night, to such a hard but significant part of life — for both of us.”
At 95 and recently widowed, he lives alone in a retirement community north of Atlanta. Over the years, he has watched America’s waves of progress and backlash about race. He keeps up with the news and marvels that his home state elected both Raphael Warnock and Marjorie Taylor Greene. He still doesn’t get too involved in politics, but from time to time he clips a large Stacey Abrams button to his plaid shirts.
He still has a resonant bass drawl, an infectious cackling laugh, and a memory for the ages. To that memory he now fondly adds the call with Jackson.
But as for his role on that long ago September night, Cheney wants no part of any “White savior” discussion. He is emphatic that people are complicated, that “no one is all one thing or another,” that “I’m not a bad person, but I did some things I wish to hell I hadn’t done.” He says he just responded with basic humanity — that he “had no other choice.”
He knows it was overwhelmingly Black people who fought for equality — that people like Robert Hayling and James Jackson deserve most of the credit for whatever progress has been made.
Last week, Jackson was recognized. On Monday at City Hall, he was on hand as Mayor Tracy Upchurch delivered a proclamation honoring Black History Month, which read in part:
“WHEREAS, during 1963 and 1964 many people from all walks of life, young and old, black, and white, from St. Augustine and afar, participated in the struggle for racial equality in St. Augustine further deepening the roots of over 450 years of African American history in the City …”
Jackson stepped to the front of the room, near the American flag, to receive a copy of the proclamation and accept the congratulations of the five city commissioners. His comments were brief:
“I got involved in the rights movement due to the fact that I’ve always thought an injustice to one man, one day, will carry over to the next man. I was just seeking justice and equality for my people in these United States.
“And when I’m saying ‘United States,’ listen to me. We have got to get that word back into the USA—‘united.’ Because divided, we will fall.”