- Detroit Free Press: “With Gov. Romney a surprise arrival and marching in the front row, more than 500 Negroes and whites staged a peaceful antidiscrimination parade up Grosse Pointe’s Kercheval Avenue Saturday. ... ‘the elimination of human inequalities and injustices is our urgent and critical domestic problem,’ the governor said. ... [Detroit NAACP President Edward M.] Turner told reporters, ‘I think it is very significant that Governor Romney is here. We are very surprised.’ Romney said, ‘If they want me to lead the parade, I’ll be glad to.’” (”Romney Joins Protest March Of 500 In Grosse Pointe,” Detroit Free Press, 6/29/63)
"The next couple of NAACP marches into the suburbs were more pleasant. Both Grosse Pointe and Royal Oak Township welcomed the interracial marchers. Close to 500 black and white marchers, including many Grosse Pointers, marched in 'the Pointes' that July. Governor George Romney made a surprise appearance in his shirt sleeves and joined the parade leaders." (Joe T. Darden, Detroit, Race And Uneven Development, 1987, p. 132)
Shirley Basore, 72, says she was sitting in the hairdressers chair in wealthy Grosse Pointe, Mich., back in 1963 when a rumpus started and she discovered that Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and her governor, George Romney, were marching for civil rights right past the window.
With the cape still around her neck, Basore went outside and joined the parade.
They were hand in hand, recalled Basore, a former high-school English teacher. They led the march. We all swung our hands, and they held their hands up above everybody elses.
She remembered the late governor as extremely handsome.
Another witness, Ashby Richardson, 64, of Massachusetts gave the campaign a similar account.
Im just appalled that the news picks this stuff up and say it didnt happen, Richardson, now a data-collection consultant, said by phone. The press is being disingenuous in terms of reporting what actually happened. I remember it vividly. I was only 15 or 20 feet from where both of them were.