James Cates was stabbed to death on the campus of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1970 in an act of racial violence.

This month, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill announced it will create a permanent memorial to James Cates Jr. The 22-year-old Black man was killed on campus in 1970 in an act of racial violence.

The school will install the memorial in the Pit outside the student union, where he was stabbed to death.

The memorial will be installed later this year.

Historic newspaper articles uncovered by local journalist Mike Ogle show Cates was involved in a large fight between a Nazi-themed motorcycle gang called the Storm Troopers and Black attendees of a dance marathon. Student organizations were hosting the all-night dance party to improve race relations. Cates was one of many young people from Chapel Hill’s Northside neighborhood who attended the event.

A newspaper report by a witness says police who responded to the fight left Cates to bleed to death on the brick pavement.

Three white men, Ronnie Broadwell, Rufus Paul Nelson and William Johnson were arrested and tried for Cates’ murder. The defense attorneys provided no witnesses and the trial consisted of testimony by the state’s witnesses. An all-white jury in Orange County acquitted the three men in 1971 following less than 2 hours of deliberation, historical reports show.

Cates was raised in Chapel Hill by his grandmother Annie Cates, who worked for the university laundry services.

Last summer, the university’s Black Student Movement called for a memorial in protests following the tenure controversy with journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones.