Acknowledgments
Foreword, Patricia Sullivan
Prologue, Glenn Feldman
1. "You Don't Have to Ride Jim Crow": CORE and the 1947 Journey of Reconciliation
Raymond Arsenault
2 T. R. M. Howard: Pragmatism over Strict Integrationist Ideology in the Mississippi Delta, 1942-1954
David T. Beito and Linda Royster Beito
3. "Blood on Your Hands": White Southerners' Criticism of Eleanor Roosevelt during World War II
Pamela Tyler
4. "City Mothers": Dorothy Tilly, Georgia Methodist Women, and Black Civil Rights
Andrew M. Manis
5. Louisiana: The Civil Rights Struggle, 1940-1954
Adam Fairclough
6. Communism, Anti-Communism, and Massive Resistance: The Civil Rights Congress in Southern Perspective
Sarah Hart Brown
7. E. D. Nixon and the White Supremacists: Civil Rights in Montgomery
John White
8. "Flag-bearers for Integration and Justice": Local Civil Rights Groups in the South, 1940-1954
John A. Salmond
9. Winning the Peace: Georgia Veterans and the Struggle to Define the Political Legacy of World War II
Jennifer E. Brooks
Epilogue: Ugly Roots: Race, Emotion, and the Rise of the Modern Republican Party in Alabama and the South
Glenn Feldman
Notes
Contributors
Index