In this 1959 article, an Alabama writer did his level-headed best to explain the sluggish reasoning that made up the opinions of his friends and neighbors as to why racial integration of the nation’s schools was a poor idea. He observed that even the proudest Southerner could freely recognize that African-Americans were ill-served by the existing school system and that they were due for some sort of an upgrade – they simply wished it wouldn’t happen quite so quickly. The journalist spent a good deal of column space explaining that there existed among the Whites of Dixie a deep and abiding paranoia over interracial marriage.


Their line of thinking seems terribly alien to us, but, be assured, Southern white reasoning has come a long way since 1923…


Read this article about the Southerner who had a racial epiphany…


From Amazon:


Read The Old Southern View of Integration<br>(Pageant Magazine, 1959) for Free

1950s white fear of racial integrationWhite Southerners Reactions to the Civil Rights Movement1950s white southern resistance to integration1950s white Southern fear of race mixingchallenges to 1950s to race-mixingchallenges to 1950s to racial integration1950s racist opinionswhite southern resistance to race mixingmind of the South in the 1950s
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