Passing of a Southern Civil Rights Pioneer-- Anne Braden
[3-9-06]
Revered white anti-racist southern activist Anne Braden died at the age of
81 on Monday morning, March 6, at Jewish Hospital in Louisville, ending
nearly 60 years of unyielding action against segregation, racism, and white
supremacy. Braden catapulted into national headlines in mid-1954 when she
and her husband Carl Braden were indicted for sedition for their leadership
in desegregating a Louisville, Kentucky, suburb.
(March 6, 2006, Louisville, KY) -- Revered white anti-racist southern
activist Anne Braden died at the age of 81 on Monday morning, March 6, at
Jewish Hospital in Louisville, ending nearly 60 years of unyielding action
against segregation, racism, and white supremacy. Braden was hospitalized on
Saturday, March 4, and had been treated for pneumonia and dehydration.
Braden catapulted into national headlines in mid-1954 when
she and her husband Carl Braden were indicted for sedition for their
leadership in desegregating a Louisville, Kentucky, suburb. Their purchase
of a house in an all-white neighborhood on behalf of African Americans
Andrew and Charlotte Wade violated Louisville’s color line and provoked
violence against both families, culminating with the dynamiting of the house
in June of 1954. A subsequent grand jury investigation concentrated not on
the neighborhood’s harassment of the Wades, but looked to the Bradens’
supposedly communistic intentions in backing the purchase, and they were
indicted for sedition that fall. The couple’s sedition case made national
news and earned them the ire of segregationists across the South, which was
reeling from the U.S. Supreme Court’s condemnation of school segregation in
its Brown ruling earlier that spring. Only Carl was convicted, and
that conviction was later overturned. The sedition charges left the Bradens
pariahs, branded as radicals and "reds" in the Cold-War South, and they
became fierce civil libertarians who openly espoused left-wing social
critiques but would never either embrace nor disavow the Communist Party
publicly because they felt that to do so accepted the terms of the 1950s
anticommunist "witch hunts."
Anne Braden’s memoir of the case, The Wall Between,
was published in 1958, becoming one of the few accounts of its era to probe
the psychology of white southern racism from within. Their case also
introduced the Bradens to the civil rights movement blossoming farther
south, in which white allies were few and far between. The Rev. Martin
Luther King, Jr., meeting Anne Braden in 1957, pronounced her "the most
amazing white woman" in her unswerving dedication to civil rights. The
Bradens soon joined the staff of a regional civil rights organization, the
Southern Conference Educational Fund (SCEF), and began traveling the region
to solicit greater white support for the movement. As the 1960s dawned, Anne
Braden became a mentor and role model to younger southern students who
joined the movement—a role she maintained for the rest of her life. Although
she was suspect in some circles, Braden publicized and supported the student
sit-ins in the pages of SCEF’s Southern Patriot newspaper, which she
edited, and she encouraged a broader vision of social change that would
include peace and economic justice. She was also instrumental in
Louisville’s Open Housing movement in the later sixties, and among the
leading white voices who helped to bring peace to the turbulent second
generation of school desegregation, in which busing brought open violence to
Louisville and other cities in the mid-1970s.
After Carl Braden’s untimely death in 1975, Anne Braden
remained a central proponent of racial justice in Louisville and across the
South, eventually evolving from pariah to heroine. Braden’s primary message
was the centrality of racism in the U.S. social fabric, but she constantly
stressed that civil rights activism was as much whites’ responsibility as it
was that of people of color. "Hers has been among the most forceful and
persistent of white voices for racial equality in modern U.S. history,"
according to her biographer, Catherine Fosl, author of Subversive
Southerner: Anne Braden and the Struggle for Racial Justice in the Cold War
South (2002).
In speeches delivered in the nearly six decades of her
activism, Braden would frequently reflect on her odyssey from segregationist
youth to anti-racist advocate: a process she called "turning myself inside
out." Reared in a middle-class, pro-segregation family, Braden changed as a
young reporter covering the emerging civil rights movement in 1947 Alabama,
where she had observed two separate and unequal systems of justice meted out
in the Birmingham courthouse. She subsequently left the supposed neutrality
of mainstream journalism to apply her considerable journalistic talents to
the aid of African Americans in their quest to end segregation. Her efforts
against southern racism, her friend and fellow activist Angela Davis
reflected, "enabled vast and often spectacular social changes. . . that most
of her contemporaries during the 1950s would never have been able to
imagine."
Decades later, Braden was still working against racism and
for justice and peace. In the fall of 2005, she joined other Louisville
activists on buses bound for the anti-war demonstration in Washington D.C.
even though she went in a wheelchair. She was a frequent voice in the
Rainbow Coalition nationally and a co-founder of the Kentucky Alliance
Against Racist and Political Repression, as well as being active in local
issues including police brutality, housing-not-bombs, environmental racism,
civil liberties, and lesbian-gay-bisexual-transgender and other human
rights. In the 1990s she became the recipient of many awards, including the
first ever Roger Baldwin Medal of Liberty, bestowed on her by the American
Civil Liberties Union in 1991. She also became a teacher, offering social
justice history courses at the University of Louisville and Northern
Kentucky University. Braden was still teaching at the time of her death and
was still fired by the passion for justice that had guided her adult life.
She had completed a proposal for a local activist summer camp only the day
before her hospitalization.
Braden was born Anne Gambrell McCarty on July 28, 1924 in
Louisville, Kentucky, to Gambrell and Anita McCarty. Most of her childhood
was spent in Anniston, Alabama, where she lived through her high school
graduation. She graduated from Randolph-Macon Woman’s College in Lynchburg,
Virginia, in 1945, and held news reporting jobs at the Anniston Star,
the Birmingham News, and the Louisville Times in the late
1940s. After Anne’s marriage to Carl Braden in 1948, the couple had three
children: James, Anita, and Elizabeth. James and Elizabeth Braden survive
their mother, along with two grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
Braden’s church was St. George’s Episcopal in Louisville.
A community memorial service will celebrate the life and
work of Anne Braden on Sunday, April 23rd, 2006, 2:00 – 5:00 pm,
at the Memorial Auditorium, 4th and Kentucky Streets, in downtown
Louisville. In lieu of flowers, donations will be received to support the
continuation of her work for justice, payable to the Carl Braden Memorial
Center, Inc., and sent to P.O. Box 1543, Louisville, KY 40201.
This news release is distributed by Kentucky
Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression and Carl Braden Memorial
Center
3208 W. Broadway
Louisville, KY 40211