Athens, Ga. - Many of the battles to desegregate
Southern colleges and universities were fought in public, but efforts to
desegregate the standardized testing that is often a prerequisite to admission
have, until now, received little attention. Now, a new University
of Georgia study reveals how two men
traveled the Deep South, facing hostility and
risking violence, to ensure that students received fair and impartial
treatment.
"We know a lot of the big stories of the civil rights era,
but this is a smaller, virtually unknown one," said study author Jan Bates
Wheeler, associate director for accreditation at the UGA Office of
Institutional Effectiveness. "It's an example of how a few people put forth a
lot of effort at great personal risk to make higher education available to
people who were being denied access."
College entrance exams such as the SAT require that students
be tested impartially and under the same conditions. In the segregated South of
the early 1960s, however, black students were routinely turned away from
testing sites, which were almost always at all-white high schools or colleges.
Wheeler notes that some colleges and universities required the SAT as
prerequisite to admission purely to create a nearly insurmountable hurdle for
prospective black students.
When black students were allowed to take the exam, white
school administrators often placed them in a separate - and usually inferior - location. One group of black students in Columbia,
South Carolina, for example, took
the 3-hour SAT in a poorly-lit basement while the proctor talked loudly to an
assistant. Wheeler uncovered evidence that Hamilton Holmes and Charlayne
Hunter, the first two black students admitted to UGA, were initially turned
away from their SAT testing center.
In response to such abuses, the College Board, the
not-for-profit organization that administers the SAT, began an ambitious
campaign in 1960 to desegregate the testing centers. The men who designed the
plan intentionally kept the effort from the public. "They didn't want publicity
because they knew that it would further solidify the massive resistance against
school desegregation," Wheeler said. "Even after they were successful, they
didn't want a history written because they didn't want the school
administrators who had cooperated with them to get into trouble."
Wheeler, who recently received her doctorate from the UGA
Institute of Higher Education and conducted the research for her dissertation,
examined more than 10,000 pages of letters, memos and reports to create the
first comprehensive history of what was called a "campaign of quiet persuasion"
to desegregate testing centers in the Deep South. The effort was led by the
late Ben Cameron Jr. of Sewanee, Tenn., a Southern liberal who -- in a telling
display of the changes that were roiling the South -- was the son and namesake of
the judge from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit who worked to
prevent James Meredith from becoming the first black student at the University
of Mississippi.
The junior Cameron served with black sailors in World War II
but returned to a society where blacks weren't allowed the same freedoms he
enjoyed. Wheeler said Cameron's wartime experiences inspired him to work toward
a society where skin color is not a barrier to college admission, even if it
meant risking his safety and his relationship with his segregationist father.
Between 1960 and 1965, Cameron and staff member Ben Gibson
of Atlanta traveled to nearly every school
district in Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana,
Mississippi and South Carolina to push for desegregation of
testing centers. They met with school principals and other officials who
oversaw the centers and presented them with two options: maintain a
desegregated testing center with equal treatment for all or lose the prestige
and convenience associated with being a testing center.
Racial slurs were often hurled at the men, and one school
superintendent tried to intimidate Gibson by taking him to a meeting of the
segregationist White Citizens Council and on a tour of neighborhoods that were
still smoldering from race riots. In Jackson,
Miss., the police and the FBI
trailed Cameron -- the latter for his protection and the former for unknown
reasons. "They were never in any immediate physical danger," Wheeler said, "but
they knew that was always a possibility."
Not all of the schools they visited were hostile. Sister
Mary Fidelis, head of St. Vincent's Academy for Girls in Savannah, readily agreed to provide up to 500
seats for students of any color. But dozens of testing sites were steadfast in
clinging to segregation and were closed by Cameron and Gibson. In some cases,
the closing necessitated the opening of testing locations at military bases,
including at Redstone Arsenal, the heart of the Army's rocket and missile
programs, in Huntsville, Ala.
By 1965, Cameron and Gibson had succeeded in their "campaign
of quiet persuasion." They received input from an advisory committee that
included well-known figures such as Ralph McGill, publisher of The Atlanta Constitution, and Stephen
Wright, president of Fisk
University, but traveled
the South on their site visits alone. "They were committed to creating a level
playing field for all students," Wheeler said. "They stuck to their principles
when it would have been easier not to."
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