Sanctuaries of Segregation

The Story of the Jackson Church Visit Campaign

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Pub Date Mar 20 2017 | Archive Date Feb 23 2018

Description

Sanctuaries of Segregation provides the first comprehensive analysis of the Jackson, Mississippi, church visit campaign of 1963–1964 and the efforts by segregationists to protect one of their last refuges. For ten months, integrated groups of ministers and laypeople attempted to attend Sunday worship services at all-white Protestant and Catholic churches in the state’s capital city. While the church visit was a common tactic of activists in the early 1960s, Jackson remained the only city where groups mounted a sustained campaign targeting a wide variety of white churches.

Carter Dalton Lyon situates the visits within the context of the Jackson Movement, compares the actions to church visits and kneel-ins in other cities, and places these encounters within controversies already underway over race inside churches and denominations. He then traces the campaign from its inception in early June 1963 through Easter Sunday 1964. He highlights the motivations of the various people and organizations, the interracial dialogue that took place on the church steps, the divisions and turmoil the campaign generated within churches and denominations, the decisions by individual congregations to exclude black visitors, and the efforts by the state and the Citizens’ Council to thwart the integration attempts.

Sanctuaries of Segregation offers a unique perspective on those tumultuous years. Though most churches blocked African American visitors and police stepped in to make forty arrests during the course of the campaign, Lyon reveals many examples of white ministers and laypeople stepping forward to oppose segregation. Their leadership and the constant pressure from activists seeking entrance into worship services made the churches of Jackson one of the front lines in the national struggle over civil rights.

Sanctuaries of Segregation provides the first comprehensive analysis of the Jackson, Mississippi, church visit campaign of 1963–1964 and the efforts by segregationists to protect one of their last...


Advance Praise

“The moral and religious issues that swirled about the civil rights movement in the early 1960s have rarely been put in richer context than in Sanctuaries of Segregation. Looking closely at the local church communities of Jackson, Mississippi, Lyon shows civil rights activists seeking admission to white churches and the variety of responses to their efforts. Activists wanted to open the church doors of a closed society to testify to Christian brotherhood’s call for integration, offering the opportunity for a rare dialogue with white Christians who defended tenaciously their control of a key institution of the southern way of life. His analysis of the fraught relationship between white moderate ministers, many of whom favored racial integration, and their segregationist congregants, who often forced them from their pulpits, adds a new level of understanding of the moral battles within white southern churches.”

—Charles Reagan Wilson, professor emeritus of history and southern studies at the University of Mississippi and author of Flashes of a Southern Spirit: Meanings of the Spirit in the U.S. South

“This book represents a major achievement. Thanks to Carter Dalton Lyon’s deep and impressive research, we now understand the story of the Jackson church visit campaign in detail. This book demonstrates how the effects of this initiative rippled across the country, and it underscores the contradictory but crucial role that white Christianity played during the civil rights years.”

—Carolyn Renée Dupont, author of Mississippi Praying: Southern White Evangelicals and the Civil Rights Movement, 1945-1975

Sanctuaries of Segregation is an intimate portrait of the strategy, tactics, and Christian witness of the Jackson movement’s 1963-64 church visit campaign, a determined appeal to convince white churches in Mississippi’s capital city of the theological and ecclesiological absurdity of their insistence on whites-only worship services. With remarkably thorough research, compelling analysis, and captivating narrative, Lyon uncovers another powerful story of the 1960s black freedom struggle and offers extraordinary insight into the perspectives of actors on all sides of the conflict.”

—Joseph T. Reiff, Shelton Professor of Religion, Emory & Henry College, and author of Born of Conviction: White Methodists and Mississippi’s Closed Society

“The moral and religious issues that swirled about the civil rights movement in the early 1960s have rarely been put in richer context than in Sanctuaries of Segregation. Looking closely at the local...


Available Editions

EDITION Paperback
ISBN 9781496816962
PRICE $28.00 (USD)

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