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Civil Rights in New York City From World War II to the Giuliani Era Edited by Clarence Taylor $35.00
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The ten contributions brought together here address varying aspects of New York’s
civil rights struggle, including the role of labor, community organizing campaigns, the
pivotal actions of prominent national leaders, the movement for integrated housing,
the fight for racial equality in public higher education, and the part played by a
revolutionary group that challenged structural, societal inequality. Long before the
Montgomery Bus Boycott, the Reverend Adam Clayton Powell Jr. helped launch the
Harlem Bus Boycott of 1941. The New York City’s Teachers’ Union had been fighting
for racial equality since 1935. Ella Baker worked with the NAACP and the city’s grassroots
movement to force the city to integrate its public school system. In 1962, a direct
action campaign by Brooklyn CORE, a racially integrated membership organization,
forced the city to provide better sanitation services to Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn’s
largest black community. Integrating Rochdale Village in South Jamaica, the largest
middle-class housing cooperative in New York, brought together an unusual coalition
of leftists, liberal Democrats, moderate Republicans, pragmatic government officials,
and business executives.
In reexamining these and other key events, Civil Rights in New York City reaffirms
their importance to the larger national fight for equality for Americans
across racial lines.
CONTRIBUTORS: Martha Biondi, Peter Eisentadt, Johanna Fernandez, Daniel
Perlstein, Jerald Podair, Brian Purnell, Barbara Ransby, Wilbur C. Rich, and Clarence
Taylor
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