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This remarkable, hard-to-find resource is an exhaustive compilation
of state laws and local ordinances in effect in 1950 that mandated
racial segregation and of pre-Brown-era civil rights legislation.
The volume cites legislation from forty-eight states and the
District of Columbia, and ordinances of twenty-four major cities
across the country. The complete text of each law or ordinance is
included, along with occasional notes about its history and the
extent to which it was enforced. Other relevant information found
in the volume ranges widely: the texts of various Supreme Court
rulings; international documents; federal government executive
orders, departmental rules, regulations, and directives;
legislation related to aliens and Native Americans; and more. In
his introduction Davison M. Douglas comments on the legislation
compiled in the book and its relevance to scholars today and also
provides biographical background on Pauli Murray, the attorney who
was the volume's original editor.
Westminster School District Of Orange County Vs. Gonzalo Mendez.
Twenty-five years of writings by the religious thinker and activist
Pauli Murray  The religious thought and activism that shaped
the late twentieth century is typically described in terms of Black
men from the major Black denominations, a depiction that fails to
account for the voices of those who not only challenged racism but
also forced a confrontation with class and gender. Of these
overlooked voices, none is more important than that of Pauli Murray
(1910–1985), the nonbinary Black lawyer, activist, poet, and
Episcopal priest who influenced such icons as Ruth Bader Ginsburg
and Thurgood Marshall. Â Anthony B. Pinn has collected
Murray’s most important sermons, lectures, and speeches from 1960
through 1985, showcasing her religious thought and activism as well
as her original and compassionate literary voice. In highlighting
major themes in Murray’s writing—including the strength and
rights of women, faithfulness, religious community, and
suffering—Pinn’s collection reveals the evolution in Murray’s
religious ideas and her sense of ministry, unpacking her role in a
tumultuous period of American history, as well as her thriving
legacy.
First published in 1956, "Proud Shoes" is the remarkable true
story of slavery, survival, and miscegenation in the South from the
pre-Civil War era through the Reconstruction. Written by Pauli
Murray the legendary civil rights activist and one of the founders
of NOW, "Proud Shoes" chronicles the lives of Murray's maternal
grandparents. From the birth of her grandmother, Cornelia Smith,
daughter of a slave whose beauty incited the master's sons to near
murder to the story of her grandfather Robert Fitzgerald, whose
free black father married a white woman in 1840, "Proud Shoes"
offers a revealing glimpse of our nation's history.
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