Frank Porter Graham
Southern Liberal, Citizen of the World
Format:Paperback
Publisher:The University of North Carolina Press
Publishing:1st Aug '25
£25.99
This title is due to be published on 1st August, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Frank Porter Graham (1888 – 1972) was one of the most consequential white southerners of the twentieth century. Born in Fayetteville and raised in Charlotte, Graham became an active and popular student leader at the University of North Carolina. After earning a graduate degree from Columbia University and serving as a marine during World War I, he taught history at UNC, and in 1930, he became the university's fifteenth president. Affectionately known as "Dr. Frank," Graham spent two decades overseeing UNC's development into a world-class public institution. But he regularly faced controversy, especially as he was increasingly drawn into national leadership on matters such as intellectual freedom and the rights of workers. As a southern liberal, Graham became a prominent New Dealer and negotiator and briefly a U.S. senator. Graham's reputation for problem solving through compromise led him into service under several presidents as a United Nations mediator, and he was outspoken as a white southerner regarding civil rights.
Brimming with fresh insights, this definitive biography reveals how a personally modest public servant took his place on the national and world stage and, along the way, helped transform North Carolina.
In [this] well-researched biography, [Frank Porter] Graham emerges as more complex and human, and his career exposes the limitations of white liberalism in the post–World War II South. . . . A well-crafted and thoughtful account."—Journal of Southern History
"An engaging and important book. . . . [T]his biography offers important lessons for how one man navigated the complexities of racism, higher education, politics, labor relations, and internationalism during mid-twentieth-century America."—Journal of American History
"[Frank Porter Graham] raises important questions for those now trying to work on, learn at, or live nearby campuses whose uses have dramatically changed since the Founding. . . . Link's account of Graham's life . . . adds to the recent reconsiderations of how the academy has changed and its place in American life has dramatically shifted."—Reviews in American History
ISBN: 9781469692067
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
384 pages