On August 27, 1956 in Clinton, Tennessee, twelve African
American students made history when they were the first to walk
through the doors of a legally desegregated high school. On that
day, integration in the South formally moved from the courtroom to
the classroom.
Author Doug Davis was a frontline witness to history. His mother
was an English teacher at the high school, and his father was a
lawyer in the initial court case. Although school opened with
minimal disruption, the first week ended with tanks rolling into
town to keep order. Later, when the parents of the black students
were reluctant to send their children to school, the author's
father was one of three who escorted the students through a
gauntlet of angry racists that had gathered in protest. Davis was
just eight when this happened, and the memories of those tense days
were the inspiration for this story.
The conflict followed the family home and included the burning
of a cross in their front yard. The family members were
eyewitnesses to their hometown's turmoil, conflict that escalated
from riots and protests, culminating in the destruction of the high
school with one hundred sticks of dynamite. Th e people of this
ruptured community bore the brunt of this momentous era of societal
change in America. Here, childhood memories of family and community
shed their light on the story.
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