Black and White Sat Down Together: The Reminiscences of an NAACP Founder

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Feminist Press at CUNY, 1996 - 164 páginas
In 1903, when white settlement worker Mary White Ovington was 38, she had no sense that there was a "racial problem" in the United States. Six years later, she, W.E.B. DuBois, and fifty others founded the NAACP. Their goals included ending racial discrimination and segregation, and achieving full civil and legal rights for African-Americans--a dream that is still alive today, along with the organization they founded.

Ovington's candid memoir reveals a corageous woman who defied the social restrictions placed on women of her generation, race, and class, and became part of an inner circle that made the decisions for the NAACP in its first forty years. Her actions often brought unwelcome notoriety--as when lurid newspaper headlines announced her attendance at a biracial dinner in 1908--yet she continued working side-by-side with such colleagues as DuBois, James Wheldon Johnson, and Walter White, and began travelling across the country to help establish NAACP chapters in the Deep South, the Midwest, and California.

Serialized in the Baltimore Afro-American newspaper in 1932 and 1933, Ovington's memoirs are here available for the first time in book form. Black and White Sat Down Together offers an insider's view of a seminal phase in the struggle for civil rights, and a moving encounter with a woman who was hailed in her time as a "fighting saint."

 

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Contenido

Preface
1
Early Impressions
3
Settlement Work
7
I Begin My Investigation
13
Two Leaders
19
Living on San Juan Hill
26
I Meet the Reporters
32
I Go South
37
In London at the Races Congress
77
War
82
How Texas Mobbed John R Shillady
88
National Association of Colored Women
94
The Stage
99
Two of My Girls
106
The Pacific Coast
113
I Review Books
118

The Far South
42
Northern Alabama
47
The Migration of 190708 to New York
51
The NAACP Begins
56
The West Indies
61
Early Years of the NAACP and the Urban League
66
Studio Days
72
My Books
124
Conclusion
129
Mary Phagan Speaks
135
The White Brute
137
Afterword
147
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Acerca del autor (1996)

Mary White Ovington (1865-1951) published The Walls Came Tumbling Down, a history of the NAACP, in 1947.

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