Introduction Index Resources Credits

Mississippi & Presidential Elections

Washington & Lincoln

Taft's Trip to Mississippi

Woodrow Wilson

FDR & Senator Pat Harrison

W.T. Marshall Collection

JFK & The University of Mississippi

LBJ

Nixon & Ford

Willie Morris Collection

Inaugurations

Presidential Signed Documents

Presidents and the Blues

Presidential Deaths

JFK and The University of Mississippi

John F. Kennedy and the Negro.  Ebony Magazine, 1964.

On 1 October 1962, James Meredith became the first African American to register at the University of Mississippi. The night before, rioters protesting desegregation attacked Meredith’s U.S. Marshall escort even as Kennedy appealed for calm to a television audience, stating “observance of the law is the eternal safeguard of liberty and defiance of the law is the surest road to tyranny.” An audio recording of this address along with other civil rights speeches appears on the LP record John F. Kennedy and the Negro produced by Ebony Magazine in 1964.

Several weeks after the crisis, Kennedy resurrected his television statement in a two-page response to a protest by U.S. Representative Thomas G. Abernethy of Mississippi.




Typed letter dated 26 October 1962 from John F. Kennedy to U.S. Representative Thomas G. Abernethy

Letter from John F. Kennedy to U.S. Representative Thomas G. Abernethy. Letter from John F. Kennedy to U.S. Representative Thomas G. Abernethy.

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John F. Kennedy and the Negro. Ebony Magazine, 1964

John F. Kennedy and the Negro.  Ebony Magazine, 1964. John F. Kennedy and the Negro.  Ebony Magazine, 1964.

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Introduction Index Resources Credits