Beyond Atlanta: The Struggle for Racial Equality in Georgia, 1940-1980

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University of Georgia Press, 2001 - History - 341 pages
This sweeping history of the civil rights movement in the South's largest state tells of many Georgias. On one extreme is Atlanta, a metropolitan center of relative black prosperity and training ground of many movement leaders. On another is Albany. A city deep in the "black belt" of the plantation South, it is the site of Martin Luther King Jr.'s greatest civil rights setback. Somewhere in between is yet another Georgia, a Georgia whose communities once constituted hundreds of Jim Crow fiefdoms. In places like "Bad" Baker County near the southern border, or in the relatively moderate town of Rome in the northern hills, black-white relations were as crude or as nuanced as the outlook of the local sheriff.

Beyond Atlanta draws on interviews with almost two hundred people--black and white--who worked for, or actively resisted, the freedom movement. Among the topics Stephen Tuck covers are the absence of consistent support from the movement's national leadership and the frustration and innovation it alternately inspired at the local level. In addition, Tuck reveals friction, along urban-rural and poor-prosperous lines, about movement goals and tactics, and he highlights the often unheralded roles played by African American women, veterans, masons, unions, neighborhood clubs, and local NAACP branches.

Tuck's narrative begins before, and continues after, the well-documented years of direct action protest in the 1960s. Though grounded in local and state matters, it is attuned to such national developments as World War II, the 1954 Brown decision, the Civil Rights Acts of 1964-65, and the growth of the Black Power movement. Perhaps most important, Beyond Atlanta makes clear the exorbitant cost of racial oppression, in terms of hampered economic and social progress, for all Georgians.

 

Contents

First Challenges to Jim Crow after 19409
9
The Upsurge of Black Protest across Georgia 1943194640
40
The Effects of the White Supremacist Backlash on Black Protest 1948196074
74
Direct Action Protest in Georgias Cities 19601965
107
SNCCs Southwest Georgia Project 19621967
158
Black Protest after the Federal Civil Rights Legislation of 19641965
192
Conclusion244
244
Bibliography305
305
Index
323
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About the author (2001)

Stephen G. N. Tuck is Director of Studies in History at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge University.

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