As a child living across from Charlie’s Place, Leroy Brunson experienced the 1950 attack firsthand.
His mother pulled him from bed and hid him and his brother under the porch before fleeing into the woods.
Later, he became friends with Dino Thompson, and the two shared stories that shaped each other’s understanding of race and community.
One story stood out: a group of neighborhood boys sprinted to see something unbelievable—Charlie Fitzgerald eating in the Kozy Korner Diner, a white establishment.
That moment, Leroy said, changed their worldview.