Our Georgia History
 

The Road to Integration
February 12, 1936 John Wesley Dobbs calls for a "political reawakening" of Atlanta's black voters from the pulpit of Big Bethel A. M. E Church.
  The Road to Integration
June 25, 1941 President Franklin Delano Roosevelt issues Executive Order 8802, making it illegal for defense contractors to discriminate against employees based on race, color(?), or religion. This executive order also established the Fair Employment Practices Committee (FEPC), overseeing the practices of the contractors
  The Road to Integration
  Franklin Delano Roosevelt
July 1, 1941 Philip Randolph and Baynard Rustin had a March on Washington scheduled on this date to protest the discrimination in defense industries. The march is called off when Roosevelt issued an Executive Order on June 25, 1941, barring discrimination based on race or religion.
  The Road to Integration
  Franklin Delano Roosevelt
July 4, 1944 Rev. Primus King, enters the courthouse in Columbus, Georgia and attempts to vote in the "white only" Democratic primary. King was black.
  The Road to Integration
  Columbus, Georgia
April 2, 1946 The U. S. Supreme Court, in Primus King v. State of Georgia, rules the "white only" primary is unconstitutional.
  The Road to Integration
June 3, 1946 U. S. Supreme Court bans segregation on interstate buses
  The Road to Integration
August 6, 1946 The Atlanta Constitution publishes Martin Luther King's letter to the editor in which the future civil rights leader calls for "basic rights and opportunities" for blacks.
  The Road to Integration
  Martin Luther King
April 9, 1947 The "Journey of Reconciliation" began, testing the adherence to new integrated interstate bus rules throughout the South, including Georgia. First of a number of "Freedom Rides", as they would later be known, sponsored by the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE)
  The Road to Integration
July 28, 1948 President Harry Truman issues Executive Order 9981, banning segregation in all branches of the armed forces
  The Road to Integration
December 11, 1953 In a front page editorial appearing in the Atlanta Constitution, Ralph McGill predicts the Supreme Court will declare school segregation unconstitutional. In the editorial, McGill states that the Court had no option other than interpreting the 14th amendment the way it was written.
  The Road to Integration
May 17, 1954 Brown vs. Board of Education, Topeka, Kansas. The U. S. Supreme Court holds that racial segregation in public schools is unconstitutional
  The Road to Integration
February 18, 1956 Dr. Thomas H. Brewer, who help create a Columbus chapter of the NAACP in 1937 and was an important figure in the Primus King case, is murdered by Lucio Flowers, a white policeman. Brewer was shot 7 times in front of his office in Columbus
  The Road to Integration
  Columbus, Georgia
March 12, 1956 Declaration of Constitutional Principles, also known as the "Southern Manifesto," is released to the press. Georgia Senator Richard B. Russell wrote the final draft of the Manifesto, which attacked the Supreme Court ruling on Brown v. Board of Education Topeka. Only three southern Senators refused to sign it: Estes Kefauver, Albert Gore (Sr.) and Lyndon Johnson.
  The Road to Integration
  Richard B. Russell, Jr.
July 23, 1956 U. S. House of Representatives passes Civil Rights legislation. The Senate refuses to take up the issue in an election year.
  The Road to Integration
June 18, 1957 The U. S. House passes Civil Rights legislation proposed by the Eisenhower administration, and backed by the President himself.
  The Road to Integration
August 7, 1957 The Senate passes the 1957 Civil Rights Bill. Because of differences between the House and Senate version, the bill goes to committee.
  The Road to Integration
August 29, 1957 The 1957 Civil Right Act is passed in the Senate by a vote of 60 to 15. It was the first Civil Rights legislation passed in the United States in 79 years.
  The Road to Integration
June 16, 1959 United States District Court Judge Frank H. Hooper rules that although he does not have the power to order integration, he does have the power to end segregation. He orders the Atlanta City Schools to desegregate
  Frank A. Hooper
  The Road to Integration
January 18, 1960 City of Atlanta approves plan to desegregate schools
  Donald L. Hollowell
  The Road to Integration
February 1, 1960 Four students walk up to the lunch counter at F. W. Woolworth's in Greensboro, North Carolina. After trying to order lunch they are asked to leave. The students begin a "sit-in," passively demanding equal treatment. The students are black; the lunch counter only served whites.
  The Road to Integration
February 29, 1960 In response to a filibuster organized by Georgia Senator Richard Russell, Majority Leader Lyndon Johnson announces he will keep the Senate in session continuously until a new Civil Rights bill proposed by the Eisenhower administration is passed. A watered-down version of the bill will pass later in the year.
  Richard B. Russell, Jr.
  The Road to Integration
March 16, 1960 Carolyn Quilloin was arrested after she sat down at the whites only counter in Levy's Department Store in Savannah. She was black.
  City of Savannah, Georgia
  The Road to Integration
May 9, 1960 Judge Hooper sets a deadline for the desegregation of Atlanta schools at May 1, 1961
  Donald L. Hollowell
  Frank A. Hooper
  The Road to Integration
October 19, 1960 During a sit-in at a Rich's lunch counter in Atlanta, Rev. Martin Luther King is arrested.
  The Road to Integration
  Martin Luther King
October 26, 1960 Robert Kennedy calls Georgia Governor Ernest Vandiver seeking King's release from Reidsville Prison
  The Road to Integration
  Martin Luther King
  Ernest Vandiver, Jr.
January 6, 1961 Macon judge William Bootle instructs the University of Georgia to admit Charlayne Hunter and Hamilton Holmes to the University, finding that they had been excluded from admission simply because they were black
  Donald L. Hollowell
  University of Georgia, Athens (UGA)
  The Road to Integration
January 9, 1961 Bootle stays his ruling forcing the University of Georgia to desegregate. Bootle's stay is ruled "improvidently granted" by an Atlanta judge. Vernon Jordan is told to escort Charlayne Hunter and Hamilton Holmes to UGA to register for class. Georgia Governor Earnest Vandiver, who is required by law to close integrated schools does so in a way that UGA can keep operating at least for a few days: He cuts off state funding.
  Donald L. Hollowell
  University of Georgia, Athens (UGA)
  Ernest Vandiver, Jr.
  The Road to Integration
January 11, 1961 Charlayne Hunter and Hamilton Holmes attend their first classes at UGA. Following a nighttime basketball game, a rowdy group surrounds Hunter's dorm and is broken up by Athens police. Hunter and Holmes are suspended "for their own protection."
  University of Georgia, Athens (UGA)
  Donald L. Hollowell
  The Road to Integration
January 12, 1961 Judge Bootle orders UGA to readmit Charlayne Hunter and Hamilton Holmes and charges Governor Ernest Vandiver with the responsibility of protecting them
  Donald L. Hollowell
  The Road to Integration
  Ernest Vandiver, Jr.
January 19, 1961 In an attempt to deal with federal pressure to integrate schools, Gov. Earnest Vandiver proposes an amendment to the Georgia constitution that ends all laws designed to maintain segregated schools. In order to have it pass the overwhelmingly pro-segregation legislature, he includes a local option to close schools or integrate. This date is often noted as January 18.
  The Road to Integration
  Ernest Vandiver, Jr.
September 15, 1961 W. W. Law is fired from his job as a Savannah postal worker after the election of G. Elliot Hagan of Sylvania, (Screven County) GA. who made it a campaign promise to have the NAACP leader fired from his job as a postal worker.
  City of Savannah, Georgia
  The Road to Integration
November 20, 1962 John F. Kennedy orders an end to racial discrimination in federal housing (Executive order 11063)
  The Road to Integration
April 12, 1963 Dr. Martin Luther King, representing the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, is arrested in Birmingham, AL, for contempt of court and parading without a permit. He had come to Birmingham in an attempt to integrate public facilities in accordance with Supreme Court rulings. While in jail he composed his response to a public letter from 8 clergymen (who were white) criticizing him for breaking the law. King responded that "We have waited 340 years for our constitutional and God-given rights. ...it is easy for those who have never felt the stinging darts of segregation to say "wait.""
  The Road to Integration
  Martin Luther King
April 24, 1963 W. W. Law calls for an end to the "night marches" in Savannah, used to encourage blacks to vote because of violence attributed to non-participants during the marches.
  City of Savannah, Georgia
  The Road to Integration
June 3, 1963 Vice-president Lyndon Baines Johnson tells advises President John F. Kennedy (through a staff member) that "blacks are tired of this patience stuff..." and that Kennedy ought to "sit-down with Russell" and answer every argument he made against civil rights
  Richard B. Russell, Jr.
  The Road to Integration
June 10, 1963 The Senate votes on cloture on a Civil Rights debate, passing it 71 to 29. This is the first time that the "Southern Bloc" of segregationist senators was defeated trying to block Civil Rights legislation
  The Road to Integration
  Richard B. Russell, Jr.
October 1, 1963 Georgia, eight months ahead of the National Civil Rights Act comprehensively desegregates virtually every public facility
  The Road to Integration
January 23, 1964 The 24th Amendment to the Constitution, elimination of poll tax, becomes law. Georgia does not ratify.
  The Road to Integration
  Georgia, the Declaration of Independence, the Articles of Confederation, and the United States Constitution
March 7, 1965 Georgians Hosea Williams and John Lewis lead a peaceful group of about 600 civil rights marchers from Selma to Montgomery. It is brutally stopped on the Edmund Pettus Bridge just outside the city limits by Alabama State Troopers. Today the beating of these peaceful marchers is known simply as "Bloody Sunday".
  The Road to Integration
September 6, 1966 Atlanta, The City Too Busy to Hate erupts in race riots resulting from a century of black oppression
  The Road to Integration




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