Authors: Patricia Bell-Scott
Tags: #Political, #Lgbt, #Biography & Autobiography, #History, #United States, #20th Century
She was astonished
: PM,
Song
, 255.
“in an inferior social
: Quoted in PM,
Song
, 254. For the complete essay, see PM, “Should the Civil Rights Cases and
Plessy v. Ferguson
Be Overruled?,” 1944, PMP.
“no legal precedents”
: PM,
Song
, 254.
“violence to the personality”
: Ibid.
Their experiments
: On the Clarks, their research, and the
Brown
case, see Richard Kluger, “The Doll Man and Other Experts,” in
Simple Justice
(New York: Knopf, 1976), 315–45, and Mamie K. Phipps Clark, “The Development of Consciousness of Self in Negro Pre-School Children” (master’s thesis, Howard University, 1939).
“To separate them”
:
Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka et. al.
, 347 U.S. 483 (1954).
“rubbish”
: PM to ER, June 1, 1954, ERP.
“If legalities must be observed”
: Ibid.
“delighted”
: ER, “My Day,” May 20, 1954.
“one of the arguments”
: Ibid.
“One can no longer”
: Ibid.
“I have been thinking”
: ER, “My Day,” June 5, 1954.
37. “I CANNOT LIVE WITH FEAR”
Eventually, 214 witnesses
:
Executive Sessions of the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations of the Committee on Government Operations
, 83rd Cong. 972 (1953) (introduction by Donald A. Ritchie, Senate Historical Office), Volume 1. Made public in 2003.
Hughes, who testified
:
Executive Sessions of the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations of the Committee on Government Operations
, 83rd Cong. 972 (1953) (statement of Langston Hughes, American writer), vol. 2. Made public in 2003.
“undeviating follower”
: Ibid., 983.
“Goodbye Christ”
: After his Senate appearance, Hughes would avoid mention of “Goodbye Christ,” which was published in the November-December 1932 issue of the
Negro Worker
, and “Put Another ‘S’ in the USA” (sometimes titled as “One More ‘S’ in the U.S.A.”), which appeared in the
Daily Worker
, April 2, 1934. Both the
Negro Worker
and the
Daily Worker
were Communist-sponsored publications.
“older”
:
Executive Sessions of the Senate Permanent Subcommittee
, 83rd Cong. 991 (statement of Hughes).
“A portion of a poem”
: Ibid., 989.
“not very representative”
: Ibid., 992.
Cohn, a homosexual
: For an example of Cohn’s treatment of a gay male witness who was one of the most influential accounting professionals in the country, see
Executive Sessions of the Senate Permanent Subcommittee
, 83rd Cong. 411 (1953), (statement of Eric L. Kohler, consulting accountant), vol. 1. Made public in 2003.
The Harlem Suitcase
: PM to ER, October 26, 1939, ERP.
“protest poetry”
: PM to Walter Lowenfels, September 14, 1967, PMP.
She had even considered
: PM,
Song
, 88–89.
The New Jersey Anti-Communist League
: “Jersey School Bars Dr. Bethune: Charge Links Her to Subversives; Meeting of Englewood Legion’s Auxiliary Off to Let Negro Leader Clear Herself,”
NYT
, April 25, 1952.
Dorothy Boulding Ferebee
: See
Executive Sessions of the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations of the Committee on Government Operations
, 83rd Cong. 1298 (1953) (statement of Dorothy Boulding Ferebee, medical director, Howard University, and president, National Council of Negro Women), vol. 2. Made public in 2003.
That Caroline Ware
: Anne Firor Scott, ed.,
Pauli Murray and Caroline Ware: Forty Years of Letters in Black and White
(Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2006), 75.
“Most of these investigations”
: ER, “My Day,” June 12, 1954.
“If we continue”
: ER, “My Day,” June 4, 1954.
“Mary McLeod Bethune”
: ER, “My Day,” May 3, 1952.
“no question”
: ER, “My Day,” May 28, 1954.
The fear fostered by
: ER, “My Day,” August 9, 1952.
“I have always thought”
: ER, “My Day,” October 29, 1947.
“like garbage”
: PM to Pauline Redmond Coggs, June 5, 1954, ERP.
“derogatory material”
: Ibid.
“As a serum”
: PM to Ralph Bunche, June 10, 1954, PMP.
One of her first
: Ibid.
“operatives”
: PM to Pauline Redmond Coggs, June 5, 1954.
“behind one’s back”
: Ibid.
“personal history”
: Ibid.
“an experimental lobotomy”
: Ibid.
“I cannot live”
: Ibid.
Murray and Coggs had made
: Pauline Redmond Coggs, interview by author, Milwaukee, WI, February 28, 1996.
“I call it a frightened”
: PM to Pauline Redmond Coggs, June 5, 1954.
“Since the Supreme Court”
: PM to ER, June 6, 1954, ERP.
38. “SOME FEAR-MONGERS MAY FEEL THAT EVEN PRESIDENT EISENHOWER MIGHT BE A SECURITY RISK”
“There appears to be”
: PM to ER, June 30, 1954, ERP.
“flesh was literally shaking”
: PM to Lillian Smith, June 11, 1954, PMP.
“an over-active thyroid”
: PM to Thelma Stevens, June 12, 1954, PMP.
“ ‘a panty-waist’ ”
: PM to ER, June 13, 1954, PMP.
“a blessing”
: PM to Thelma Stevens, June 12, 1945.
“But how hard it is”
: Lillian Eugenia Smith,
The Journey
(Cleveland: World, 1954), 85; quoted in PM to Pauline Redmond Coggs, June 5, 1954, PMP.
“well and strong”
: ER to PM, June 15, 1954, PMP.
“lost a great deal”
: PM to ER, June 17, 1954, PMP.
“drop in”
: ER to PM, June 19, 1954, PMP.
Like Murray, ER
: ER to Lillian Smith, July 24, 1954, Lillian Smith Papers, Hargrett Rare Books and Manuscript Library, University of Georgia.
“such a request”
: Helen Gandy to PM, June 10, 1954, U.S. Department of Justice, FBI, Subject File: Anna Pauline Murray (140–0-3505).
According to an internal office
: Memorandum, L. N. Conroy to Mr. A. Rosen, June 10, 1954, U.S. Department of Justice, FBI, Subject File: Anna Pauline Murray (140-0-3505).
“front men”
: PM to ER, June 30, 1954, ERP.
“received less housing”
: Ibid.
“ridiculous”
: Ibid.
Murray believed
: Coggs, interview by author.
“behavior, activities”
: Dwight D. Eisenhower, “Executive Order 10450—Security Requirements for Government Employment,” Exec. Order No. 10450, 18 Federal Register, 2489 (April 27, 1953).
“Sexual perversion”
: Ibid.
Thus, homosexuals
: For an in-depth discussion, see David K. Johnson,
The Lavender Scare: The Cold War Persecution of Gays and Lesbians in the Federal Government
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004), and Lillian Faderman,
Odd Girls and Twilight Lovers: A History of Lesbian Life in Twentieth-Century America
(New York: Penguin, 1992), 139–58.
“illness, including any mental condition”
: Dwight D. Eisenhower, “Executive Order 10450—Security Requirements for Government Employment.”
“women’s achievements”
: ER, “My Day,” June 19, 1954.
“wished so much”
: Ibid.
39. “WHAT I HAVE TO SAY NOW IS
ENTIRELY PERSONAL
”
Word of ER’s presence
: PM to ER, July 4, 1954, ERP.
“like a little happy elf”
: Ibid.
“PERSONAL AND CONFIDENTIAL”
: Ibid.
Halfway through
: Powell, interview by author.
“What I have to say”
: PM to ER, July 4, 1954.
What is known
: ER,
This Is My Story
, 256–59.
“Griselda moods”
: Ibid., 149. For the perspectives of ER’s biographers on her experience of depression, see Cook,
ER
, 1:235; Cook,
ER
, 2:269; Goodwin,
No Ordinary Time
, 89–95; Joseph P. Lash,
A World of Love: Eleanor Roosevelt and Her Friends, 1943–1962
(New York: Doubleday, 1984), 55–56; and Lash,
Eleanor and Franklin
, 237–38.
“prayerfully”
: PM to ER, July 4, 1954.
“You have one idea”
: ER to PM, July 7, 1954, PMP.
“can now well afford”
: PM to Channing Tobias, July 28, 1954, PMP.
40. “WHAT A WONDERFUL WEEKEND IT WAS”
“indomitable courage”
: PM,
Song
, 293.
“example”
: Ibid.
“laugh-and-cry”
: PM to Skipper [Caroline Ware], July 21, 1954, PMP.
“If it would not”
: PM to ER, July 10, 1954, ERP.
ER welcomed
: ER to PM, July 13, 1954, PMP.
On Friday, October 15, 1954
: PM,
Song
, 291–93.
The first reports
: This description of Hurricane Hazel is drawn from the Associated Press, “Hurricane Smashes Haiti Cities: Toll Is Heavy; Storm Moves North,”
NYT
, October 14, 1954; “Carolina Beaches Ravaged by Hazel: 6 Dead, Houses Washed Away,”
NYT
, October 16, 1954; “Virginia Hard Hit,”
NYT
, October 16, 1954; “Old Mount Vernon Tree Is Added to Hazel’s Toll,”
NYT
, October 21, 1954; Wayne Phillips, “100-Mile Wind Here Leaves Three Dead: Cottages and Church Steeple Are Victims of Hurricane’s Battering Winds,”
NYT
, October 16, 1954; Russell Porter, “Death Toll Is 39: Scores Hurt, Thousands Homeless,”
NYT
, October 16, 1954; and William R. Conklin, “Hurricane’s Toll Increases to 118,”
NYT
, October 17, 1954.