Ground Crew
The Fight to End Segregation at Georgia State
Format:Paperback
Publisher:University of Georgia Press
Published:15th Oct '19
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
The forgotten details of a landmark case against segregation in the South
Arnold became the NAACP’s first federal court victory against segregated education in Georgia, establishing key legal precedents for subsequent litigation against racial discrimination in education.
With Ground Crew, Maurice Daniels provides an intimate and detailed account that chronicles a compelling story.
The Hunt v. Arnold decision of 1959 against the state of Georgia marked a watershed moment in the fight against segregation in higher education. Though the Supreme Court declared school segregation illegal in its 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision, Georgia was among many southern states that refused to abide by the Court’s ruling. In 1956, the Georgia State College of Business (now Georgia State University) denied admission to nine black applicants. Three of those applicants—lead plaintiff Barbara Pace Hunt, Iris Mae Welch, and Myra Elliott Dinsmore—coordinated with the NAACP and local activists to win a groundbreaking lawsuit against the state of Georgia and its Board of Regents. Hunt v. Arnold became the NAACP’s first federal court victory against segregated education in Georgia, establishing key legal precedents for subsequent litigation against racial discrimination in education.
With Ground Crew, Maurice Daniels provides an intimate and detailed account that chronicles a compelling story. Following their litigation against the all-white institution, Hunt, Welch, and Dinsmore confronted hardened resistance and attacks from white supremacists, including inflammatory statements by high-profile political leaders and personal threats from the Ku Klux Klan. Using archival sources, court records, collections of personal papers, news coverage, and oral histories of that era, Daniels explores in depth the plaintiffs’ courageous fight to end segregation at Georgia State. In lucid prose, Daniels sheds light on the vital role of community-based activists, local attorneys, and the NAACP in this forgotten but critical piece of the struggle to end segregation.
In Ground Crew, Maurice Daniels recovers the history of Hunt v. Arnold, the important yet little-known case in which courageous lawyers and activists sought to end Jim Crow at the Georgia State College of Business. Ground Crew should be required reading for students of the black freedom struggle.
* author of Courage to Dissent: Atlanta and the Long History of the Civil Rights Movement, winner of the Bancroft Prize *Daniels weaves together extensive archival research and interviews with people involved in, familiar with, and affected by the case to illustrate how the fight to desegregate Georgia State fit within the NAACP’s overarching strategy to desegregate higher education. Ground Crew represents an excellent addition to the literature on higher education desegregation
* Journal of African American StudiISBN: 9780820355979
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
200 pages