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Volume 3: Birth of a New Age,
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To Dwight D. Eisenhower27 August 1956
The President of the United States Honorable Sir: Continued threats, violence which has included bombings of homes on January 30, February 1, and August 24, 1956; the hangings in effigy of a Negro and a white man who "talked integration," and mass arrests authorized by city and state officials against Negroes, have tended to deprive Negroes of their civil rights and have left them without protection of the law here in Alabama. Public officials are members of White Citizens Councils whose purpose is to preserve segregation by economic reprisals against Negroes. These officials are doing nothing to prevent the violence. In fact, according to the local press, the Montgomery Journal (a copy of which is included), the city police of Montgomery led the procession to the down town public square when the effigies of the Negro and white man were hanged by a number of white men, some of whom were members of the White Citizens Councils. The effigies were allowed to remain there for over an hour before the mayor ordered them removed. Not one arrest was made in the case, yet there is a law against putting up signs of any kind in the down town area. (Newspaper pictures of the demonstrations and bombings are included). As a result of the last bombing of a minister's home, the mayor attributed the incident to a publicity hoax on the part of Negroes to revive interest in the local Negro bus boycott against city transportation lines for abusive treatment. (A federal suit contesting the constitutionality of segregration laws on public intra-state transportation is at this time before the Supreme Court of the United States.) The "don't care" attitude of public officials toward such violence is manifesting itself throughout the city and state and encouraging hoodlums to continue. If something is not done to put a stop to it, further violence can be expected. Hundreds of Negroes are being arrested daily on trumped-up charges and fined. The revival of the Ku Klux Klan is a constant threat and the robed members are allowed to demonstrate in the city without police interference whatsoever. Thousands of Negroes in the city of Montgomery and the state of Alabama are deprived of their rights to vote, on the grounds that they "cannot successfully pass the test." As a result, unscrupulous men get into office on platforms of racial hate and provide no protection or justice for the minority race. We, therefore, urge you to use the power of your office to see that the proper investigation is made in Montgomery and Alabama to the end that justice and law will prevail. Respectfully yours, cc: U.S. Attorney General Herbert Brownell THLS. WCFG-KAbE. |