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Shop / ole south

A Soldier's Story of the James Meredith and the Ole Miss Riot

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In September 1962, James Meredith became the first African American admitted to the University of Mississippi, a milestone in the civil rights movement. His admission triggered a riot spurred by a mob of three thousand whites from across the South, which was further fueled by the state's segregationist authorities. Historians have called the Oxford riot an insurrection and the worst constitutional crisis since the Civil War.

The escalating conflict prompted President John F. Kennedy to send twenty thousand regular army troops, in addition to federalized Mississippi National Guard soldiers, into the civil unrest (ten thousand into the town itself) to quell rioters and restore law and order. James Meredith and the Ole Miss Riot is the memoir of one of the participants, a young army second lieutenant named Henry Gallagher, born and raised in Minnesota.

Gallagher's military police battalion from New Jersey deployed, without the benefit of riot-control practice or advance briefing, into a deadly civil rights confrontation. He was thereafter assigned as the officer-in-charge of Meredith's security detail at a time when he faced very real threats to his life. Gallagher's first-person account considers the performance of his fellow soldiers before and after the riot. He writes of the behavior of the white students, some of them defiant, others perceiving a Communist-inspired Kennedy conspiracy in Meredith's entry into Mississippi's "flagship" university.

The author depicts the student, Meredith, a man who at times seemed disconnected with the violent reality that swirled around him, and who even aspired to be freed of his protectors so that he could just be another Ole Miss student. James Meredith and the Ole Miss Riot is both an invaluable perspective on a pivotal moment in American history and an in-depth look at a unique home front military action.

From the vantage of the fiftieth anniversary of the riot, Henry T. Gallagher reveals the young man he was in the midst of one of history's most profound tests, a soldier from the Midwest encountering the powder keg of the Old South and its violent racial divisions.

product information:

AttributeValue
publisher‎University Press of Mississippi (August 1, 2012)
language‎English
hardcover‎208 pages
isbn_10‎1617036536
isbn_13‎978-1617036538
item_weight‎1.12 pounds
dimensions‎5.8 x 0.91 x 8.63 inches
best_sellers_rank#1,411,599 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
#12,164 in American Military History
#25,794 in U.S. State & Local History
#40,954 in Memoirs (Books)
customer_reviews
ratings_count30
stars4.4

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