THE LONG SHADOW OF LITTLE ROCK

  • SIGNED
  • New York: David McKay Company, 1962
By Bates, Daisy; Roosevelt, Eleanor
New York: David McKay Company, 1962. First printing. Very good in good jacket.. Inscribed first edition of this memoir recounting the 1957 Little Rock Crisis by the activist and journalist who "led the battle" for school desegregation - an association copy owned and annotated by one of the only white ministers to walk with the schoolchildren that fateful day, the Rev. Dunbar Ogden. In 1957, three years after the Supreme Court in Brown v. Board of Education ruled school segregation unconstitutional, Daisy Bates, of the local ARKANSAS STATE PRESS newspaper and President of the Arkansas NAACP, became an organizing force behind the Little Rock Nine: helping to hand-pick the students, arranging for their protection, and the like. Among those she called to help in that effort was the Rev. Dunbar Ogden, a white minister of the nearby Central Presbyterian Church. Bates asked if Ogden could convince other white ministers to walk with the children, as both an act of solidarity and security. Bates would write (in this book) of Ogden: "When I talked to him that night, he was momentarily hesitant [but] [t]he next morning, when the children assembled to go to school, Mr. Ogden was there to walk with them." Ogden was one of only a few white clergy who joined the Little Rock Nine as they made their way past a sea of hostile spectators towards Little Rock Central High School on September 4, 1957.

Though the students were turned away that day by then-governor Orval Fabus, they were eventually successful after President Eisenhower ordered members the 101st Airborne Division into Little Rock. Like many involved in the effort, however, the Rev. Ogden paid a heavy price. Again, as Bates describes in this book: "Ogden had become a traitor [...] Members of his church stopped attending services, stopped giving financial support, and finally forced him to resign."

Eventually Ogden relocated to West Virginia, where he continued to work both as a minister and a civil rights worker. It is also where Bates (or more likely, given the lack of personalization in the inscription, her publisher) sent Ogden this inscribed copy of THE LONG SHADOW. Ogden appears several times throughout the book and in several of those places he has briefly annotated the text. An important memento of civil rights solidarity. 8'' x 5.25''. Original orange cloth, lettered in black to spine. In original unclipped ($4.75) orange and black photographic jacket, designed by A|D Associates. Illustrated in black and white. xviii, 234 pages. Inscribed by Bates on front fly leaf: "Best Wishes from the author. / Daisy Bates / Little Rock, Ark. / Nov. 30, 196 [sic]." Penciled ownership inscription: "Please return / to / Dunbar Ogden / 502 Kanawha Blvd. W. / Charleston, W. Va." Jacket with noticeable rippling to panels, light edgewear. Book with few small pieces of tape to front and rear paste down, likely formerly holding down previous mylar cover, spots of offsetting to endpapers and cloth likely from same, underlining and minor marginalia penciled to a couple leaves, else sound.

Details

Title

THE LONG SHADOW OF LITTLE ROCK

Author

Bates, Daisy; Roosevelt, Eleanor

Condition

Good

Publisher

David McKay Company: New York

Date

1962

Edition

First printing


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