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Breaking Down Barriers - George McLaurin and the Struggle to End Segregated Education (Paperback, New edition)
Loot Price: R539
Discovery Miles 5 390
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(14%)
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Breaking Down Barriers - George McLaurin and the Struggle to End Segregated Education (Paperback, New edition)
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List price R630
Loot Price R539
Discovery Miles 5 390
You Save R91 (14%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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For nearly sixty years, the University of Oklahoma, in obedience to
state law, denied admission to African Americans. Only in October
1948 did this racial barrier start to break down, when an elderly
teacher named George McLaurin became the first African American to
enroll at the university. McLaurin's case, championed by the NAACP,
drew national attention and culminated in a U.S. Supreme Court
decision. In Breaking Down Barriers, distinguished historian David
W. Levy chronicles the historically significant - and at times
poignant - story of McLaurin's two-year struggle to secure his
rights. Through exhaustive research, Levy has uncovered as much as
we can know about George McLaurin (1887-1968), a notably private
person. A veteran educator, he was fully qualified for admission as
a graduate student in the university's School of Education. When
the university denied his application, solely on the basis of race,
McLaurin received immediate assistance from the NAACP and its lead
attorney Thurgood Marshall, who brilliantly defended his case in
state and federal courts. On his very first day of class, as Levy
details, McLaurin had to sit in a special alcove, separate from the
white students in the classroom. Photographs of McLaurin in this
humiliating position set off a firestorm of national outrage.
Dozens of other African American men and women followed McLaurin to
the university, and Levy reviews the many bizarre contortions that
university officials had to perform, often against their own
inclinations, to accord with the state's mandate to keep black and
white students apart in classrooms, the library, cafeterias and
dormitories, and the football stadium. Ultimately, in 1950, the
U.S. Supreme Court, swayed by the arguments of Marshall and his
co-counsel Robert Carter, ruled in McLaurin's favor. The decision,
as Levy explains, stopped short of toppling the decades-old
doctrine of 'separate but equal.' But the case led directly to the
1954 landmark decision in Brown v. Board of Education, which
finally declared that flawed policy unconstitutional.
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