BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY
George Wallace’s blockade of black students at the University of Alabama remains one of America’s darkest hours nearly 50 years later
Former Alabama governor’s racist stand shocked the nation in 1963
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
The proud state of Alabama was on the brink of a historic change and all that stood in the way of progress was hard-nosed Gov. George C. Wallace.
Wallace had promised the white Alabamans who elected him by a landslide that he would never let blacks integrate their schools.
“I say segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever,” Wallace declared when he took office in January 1963.
And when a federal judge ordered the University of Alabama to integrate, Wallace saw an opportunity to make good on his vow — and defend an old order shaken to its core by blacks demanding to be treated like equals.
That was how Wallace came to be standing at the door of Foster Auditorium on June 11, 1963 — and barring the way of two black students, Vivian Malone and James Hood.
Oddly enough, Wallace would probably never have gotten the chance to take that futile stand had it not been for black Alabamans.
When Wallace first ran for governor in 1958, he was endorsed by — of all things — the NAACP. He decried the naked appeals to racism made by his opponent, who had been backed by the Ku Klux Klan.
But after Wallace lost in the Democratic primary, he did an about face and vowed he would never be “outn------d again.”
Now, on a sweltering June day in Tuscaloosa, Wallace found himself squaring off with two black students determined to register for classes at the home of the Crimson Tide.
Malone and Hood were not alone. Everybody knew this confrontation was coming and the national media was watching.
So was the Alabama National Guard, which had actually trained for the possibility that they might have to physically move the pugnacious politician from the doorway.
Deputy Attorney General Nicholas Katzenbach approached Wallace are ordered him to step aside. Wallace refused and launched into a speech about states rights.
Katzenbach listened patiently and then called President John Kennedy, who made it clear Wallace had to move.
Minutes later, Gen. Henry Graham walked up and politely asked Wallace to move.
“Sir, it is my sad duty to ask you to step aside under the orders of the President of the United States,” he said.
Wallace spoke a few more defiant words. And then, he bowed to progress and stepped aside.
Two year later, Jones became to first African-American to graduate from the University of Alabama.
Wallace’s defiance that day made a hero to many and he went on to make four failed runs for the presidency. He survived an assassination attempt that left him wheelchairbound. And not long before he died in 1998, he had a profound change of heart.
Wallace disavowed his racist past and apologized to civil rights leaders for defending segregation.
“I was wrong,” he said. “Those days are over, and they ought to be over.”
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