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No history of the civil rights era in the South would be complete
without an account of the remarkable life and career of Grace Towns
Hamilton, the first African American woman in the Deep South to be
elected to a state legislature.
A national official of the Young Women's Christian Association
early in her career, Hamilton later headed the Atlanta Urban
League, where she worked within the confines of segregation to
equalize African American access to education, health care, and
voting rights. In the Georgia legislature from 1965 until 1984, she
exercised considerable power as a leader in the black struggle for
local, state, and national offices, promoting interracial
cooperation as the key to racial justice. Her probity and
moderation paved the way for the election of other black women, and
by the end of her political career no southern legislature was
without women members of her race.
Lorraine Nelson Spritzer and Jean B. Bergmark examine two
generations of African American history to give the long view of
Hamilton's activism. The life spans of Hamilton and her father, an
Atlanta University professor who was her greatest mentor,
encompassed the best and worst of the African American experience,
inevitably shaping Hamilton's outlook and achievements.
This biography of the first woman to be elected to Congress from
the state of Georgia is more than the story of one woman's
challenge of the political establishment. It also covers
professional women in the modern South, southern liberalism in the
New Deal era and beyond, and the gathering forces of racial change
in the era immediately preceding the civil rights movement.
A courageous and high-spirited woman, Helen Douglas Mankin drove
an ambulance in France in 1918, made a daring cross-country
motor-car tour with her sister in 1922, and was one of the first
women to practice law before the state bar. Her political career
began in 1936, when she was elected to the state legislature from
Atlanta. During her four terms in office she worked for progressive
legislation in the areas of child welfare, education, electoral
reform, and women's rights. In 1946 when a special election was
called to fill the unexpired term of Fifth District Congressman
Robert Ramspeck, Helen Mankin left the legislature to seek the
office. Of the seventeen candidates in the race, only Mankin
actively sought the support of the black community, and she won the
seat by a margin smaller than her vote in the heavily black Ashby
Street precinct of Atlanta. Talmadge dubbed her "the Belle of Ashby
Street" and belittled "the spectacle of Atlanta Negroes sending a
Congresswoman to Washington."
She was renominated in the no longer all-white Democratic
primary of July 1946, winning more popular votes than her nearest
opponent, but the entrenched political forces in the state unified
to orchestrate her defeat and her opponent claimed victory.
Although her tenure in Congress was brief and she never again held
office, her legacy is one of courage and conviction in an era that
saw many changes in the South and the nation.
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