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A Passion for Justice: J. Waties Waring & Civil Rights
Was R539.95Now R458.96(eB 4590)
Delivery time: Usually within 10 working days. Country: United States of AmericaFormat: Softcover
Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc, USAISBN: 9780195147155 Publication date: August 2001 Length: 240mm Width: 156mm Thickness: 20mm Weight: 458g Pages: 312 Illustrations: Illustrated Readership: Professional & scholarly
A Passion for Justice: J. Waties Waring & Civil Rights
Author: Tinsley E. Yarbrough
Was R539.95 Now R458.96
This text tells the story of US District Court Judge Julius Waties Waring who shocked family, friends, and an entire state in 1945 when, at age 65, he divorced his wife of more than 30 years and embarked upon a far-reaching challenge to the most fundamental racial values of his native region. An eighth-generation Charlestonian with a prestigious address, impeccable social credentials, and years of intimate association with segregationist politicians, U.S. District Court Judge Julius Waties Waring shocked family, friends, and an entire state in 1945 when, at age sixty-five, he divorced his wife of more than thirty years and embarked upon a far-reaching challenge to the most fundamental racial values of his native region. The first jurist in modern times to declare segregated schooling inequality per se, Waring also ordered the equalization of teachers' salaries and outlawed South Carolina's white primary. Off the bench, he and his second wife-a twice-divorced, politically liberal Northerner who was even more outspoken in her political views than Waring himself-castigated Dixiecrats and southern liberals alike for their defense of segregation, condemned the sickness of white southern society, urged a complete breakdown of state-enforced bars to racial intermingling, and entertained blacks in their home, becoming pariahs in South Carolina and controversial figures nationally. Tinsley Yarbrough examines the life and career of this fascinating but neglected jurist, assessing the controversy he generated, his place in the early history of the modern civil rights movement, and the forces motivating his repudiation of his past. ... the definitive biography ... the reprinting of this engaging book in paperback in most welcome. History Yarbrough's definitive biography brilliantly captures Waring's lonely, costly, but heroic crusade for racial equality ... Makes for absorbing and even inspiring reading. I highly recommend this important book. The Historian A well-written and remarkably balanced biogrgraphy of one of America's most controversial jurists ... Informative and penetrating, A Passion for Justice complements very well the existing studies on local civil rights activists, and should be required reading for all students of civil rights history. Georgia Historical Quarterly
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