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The Little Rock Central High School integration crisis did not end
in1957 when President Eisenhower sent a portion of the first
Airborne Division to protect nine black students. The turmoil was
entering its second year in 1958 when Arkansas governor Orval
Faubus invoked a hastily passed state law to close the high schools
rather than obey the federal court orders that would integrate
them. A group of respectable, middle-class white women, faced with
the prospect of no schools as well as the further loss of their
city's good name, turned militant. Led by Adolphine Fletcher Terry,
a prominent, "old family" civic leader in her seventies, the wome n
quickly put together the Women's Emergency Committee to Open Our
Schools (WEC), a highly effective organization that bombarded the
city with ads, fliers, and statements challenging Faubus's action.
At peak membership, the WEC mustered two thousand to their cause.
Largely inexperienced in politics when they joined the WEC, these
women became articulate, confident promoters of public schools and
helped others to understand that those schools must be fully
integrated. Forty years later, Sara Murphy, a key member of the
WEC, recounts the rarely told sto1y of these courageous women who
formed a resistance movement. With passion and sensitivity, she
reconstructs the challenges and triumphs of that battle, which
issued from the mutual link Southern white women shared with
disfranchised African Americans in their common goal for full
citizenship.
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