Bloody Tuesday : the untold story of the struggle for civil rights in Tuscaloosa /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Giggie, John M. (John Michael), 1965- author.
Imprint:New York, NY : Oxford University Press, [2024]
Description:xii, 368 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/13485231
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Varying Form of Title:Untold story of the struggle for civil rights in Tuscaloosa
ISBN:9780197766668
0197766668
9780197766682
9780197766699
9780197766675
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
Summary:"This book began in a barbershop. Reverend Thomas William "T.W." Linton, the spry then seventy-seven-year-old owner, was sharing memories from his sixty-year career while cutting my hair on a summer afternoon in Tuscaloosa in 2011. I had been coming to the shop since reading about him in the Tuscaloosa News about two years earlier. Rev. Linton loved to reminisce while he worked. When he was unhurried, he would take up to an hour before stashing his clippers and swinging the black barber's cape off my shoulders. With no one waiting in line that day, Rev. Linton had the time to focus on me and tell a story about an event that changed his life. I had heard snippets of it from him before but never the whole version"--
Other form:Online version: Giggie, John M. (John Michael), 1965- Bloody Tuesday New York, NY : Oxford University Press, [2024] 9780197766682
Review by Library Journal Review

Giggie (history, Univ. of Alabama; After Redemption) spearheads oral history projects documenting segregation. His latest book examines what happened on June 9, 1964, in Tuscaloosa, AL. That's when police, KKK members, and deputized citizens violently attacked more than 600 people who were inside First African Baptist Church. The latter group was preparing to protest a new courthouse that featured segregated facilities. The Reverend Linton of Howard & Linton Barbershop, who offered shelter that day, now recounts the horrors he witnessed. He encouraged Giggie to tell the story; this book is the result. The courthouse eventually integrated, but the community remained traumatized and called that day Bloody Tuesday. It became one of the most violent scenes in the entire civil rights movement. But racist violence in Tuscaloosa wasn't limited to one day; it remained an ingrained institution, with Black people living under oppression and an imposed loss of opportunities, education, and life. VERDICT A powerful analysis and assemblage of oral histories from Black residents of Tuscaloosa, AL, demonstrating racism's lingering effect on people, generation after generation.--Jessica A. Bushore

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Searching history of an event long hidden in the annals of the Civil Rights Movement. Selma, Montgomery, Birmingham: Alabama's cities have long been commemorated as flashpoints in the Black struggle for equality. Tuscaloosa, writes University of Alabama professor Giggie, should be mentioned in the same breath as "an important battleground in the escalating conflict between Black activists and white segregationists in the South during the 1960s." There, on June 9, 1964, a combined force of city police and KKK members attacked Black protestors, sending almost 100 to jail and badly injuring dozens more. One of the instigators was Imperial Wizard Robert Shelton, who drew on a force of an estimated 10,000 members and sympathizers in Alabama alone. Local police were squarely on the side of the segregationists, backed by the infamous Bull Connor in Birmingham. That the violent suppression in Tuscaloosa isn't better known, writes Giggie, can be attributed to many factors. Other events crowded it off the front page, most survivors and onlookers kept silent out of fear, and "none of the white people responsible for the violence were compelled to explain themselves and be held accountable." Justice slowly arced all the same: One KKK attack met with armed response from the Black community; a confrontation with actor Jack Palance (assumed to be Black due to his deeply tanned appearance) led to negative publicity for the city; Shelton lost his job; the chief of police eventually turned on the KKK; and, in time, the University of Alabama was desegregated, along with other city and state institutions. For all that, notes the author, the current right-wing move to suppress the history of civil rights means that it will be all the more difficult for the lessons of Tuscaloosa to be aired. A welcome resurrection of a forgotten episode in the sorrowful history of segregation. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review


Review by Kirkus Book Review