Born to Rebel: An AutobiographyUniversity of Georgia Press, 2003 M04 1 - 380 páginas Born the son of a sharecropper in 1894 near Ninety Six, South Carolina, Benjamin E. Mays went on to serve as president of Morehouse College for twenty-seven years and as the first president of the Atlanta School Board. His earliest memory, of a lynching party storming through his county, taunting but not killing his father, became for Mays an enduring image of black-white relations in the South. Born to Rebel is the moving chronicle of his life, a story that interlaces achievement with the rebuke he continually confronted. |
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Página x
... lived to see the " Second Reconstruction , " the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s , he also helped launch and sustain it . A 1971 article in the Harvard Theological Review pronounced Mays one of three " outstanding Black ...
... lived to see the " Second Reconstruction , " the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s , he also helped launch and sustain it . A 1971 article in the Harvard Theological Review pronounced Mays one of three " outstanding Black ...
Página xiii
... lived in a segregated society , but he refused to support or be a part of segregation . He climbed stairs rather than ride a segregated elevator ; he walked rather than support a segregated mass - transit system . In writing his ...
... lived in a segregated society , but he refused to support or be a part of segregation . He climbed stairs rather than ride a segregated elevator ; he walked rather than support a segregated mass - transit system . In writing his ...
Página xvi
... lived . Charges of graft among Reconstruction politicians are now con- sidered in the perspective of the widespread tolerance of avarice and peculation that produced the Democratic Tweed Ring in New York City and the massive corruption ...
... lived . Charges of graft among Reconstruction politicians are now con- sidered in the perspective of the widespread tolerance of avarice and peculation that produced the Democratic Tweed Ring in New York City and the massive corruption ...
Página xix
... lived . Every black man knew that standing up to whites put life itself in jeopardy . Yet Mays , from the time he was a young man , proclaimed loudly and eloquently that African Americans should be , had to be , truly free and equal ...
... lived . Every black man knew that standing up to whites put life itself in jeopardy . Yet Mays , from the time he was a young man , proclaimed loudly and eloquently that African Americans should be , had to be , truly free and equal ...
Página xx
... Lived Years South Carolina Georgia Virginia Florida Illinois 1882-1903 109 241 70 115 10 1904-1908 14 52 4 13 2 1909-1913 18 75 2 44 1914-1918 10 79 4 23 2 1919-1923 10 58 3 34 0 1924-1927 4 5 1928-1932 3 8 1933-1937 3 13 1938-1942 1 6 ...
... Lived Years South Carolina Georgia Virginia Florida Illinois 1882-1903 109 241 70 115 10 1904-1908 14 52 4 13 2 1909-1913 18 75 2 44 1914-1918 10 79 4 23 2 1919-1923 10 58 3 34 0 1924-1927 4 5 1928-1932 3 8 1933-1937 3 13 1938-1942 1 6 ...
Contenido
In the Days of My Youth | 1 |
Be Careful and Stay Out of Trouble | 22 |
Frustrations Doubts Dreams | 35 |
Finding Out for Myself | 50 |
Atlanta 19211924 | 66 |
Morehouse and Shiloh | 89 |
Chicago to Orangeburg to Tampa | 99 |
The Tampa Story | 106 |
Morehouse School of Religion and the Interdenomination Center | 234 |
The Church and Race | 241 |
Martin Luther King Jr | 265 |
I Can Sing Atlanta The Trail Blazers | 275 |
I Can Sing Atlanta The Young Warriors | 287 |
Retrospect and Prospect | 300 |
APPENDICES | 323 |
The Church Amidst Ethnic and Racial Tensions | 349 |
Two More Detours | 125 |
In the Nations Capital | 139 |
Race and Caste Outside the USA | 149 |
Learning the Problem in Depth | 162 |
So Much with So Little and So Few | 170 |
Other Involvements | 196 |
Southern Negro Leaders Challenged the White South | 213 |
Politicians and President Kennedy | 221 |
Eulogy at the Funeral Services of Martin Luther King Jr at Morehouse College Atlanta Georgia April 9 1968 | 357 |
Interracial Hypertension | 361 |
Statement of Conference of White Southerners on Race Relations | 363 |
The Richmond Statement | 366 |
Excerpts from Correspondence Regarding Merger of Seminary Work of Gammon Morris Brown and Morehouse | 368 |
Degrees | 370 |
371 | |
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Términos y frases comunes
accepted African American asked Atlanta University Atlanta University Center Bates Bates College believe Benjamin Benjamin E Board boys called campus Christian civil rights color Committee Conference Council Court delegates discrimination Doctor elected faculty father federal friends Gammon Georgia Governor graduate Greenwood County high school Howard University institutions interracial justice knew leaders leadership lived lynching Martin Luther King Mays's ministers Morehouse College nation Negro colleges Negro students Negroes and whites never nonviolence passengers percent persons Phi Beta Kappa political president of Morehouse problem Pullman race relations racial racism Sadie School of Religion seats segregation Seminary social South Carolina Southern white speak speech Spelman Spelman College Talmadge Tampa teachers Theological things Tillman tion told train trustees United University of Chicago University of Georgia Urban League vote W. E. B. DuBois wanted Washington white women YMCA
Pasajes populares
Página lxvi - He has showed you, 0 man, what is good; and what does the Lord require of you but to do justice, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God?
Página x - The action of President Roosevelt in entertaining that nigger will necessitate our killing a thousand niggers in the South before they will learn their place again.” In 1909, when the NAACP was founded, Ben Mays was fifteen years old and,