A southern Liberal, the Southern Regional Council, and the Limits of Managed Race Relations



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As whites throughout the Old Dominion and the South awoke to the realization that only a thorough commitment to equalization could head off integration, the NAACP switched tack and challenged segregation itself. Throughout the 1930s and 1940s, the NAACP had won a series of court rulings that challenged the constitutionality of inequality in graduate and professional schools without attacking segregation directly. But after the Sweatt ruling in 1950, the civil rights organization decided to cease filing equalization suits and to seek the abolition of segregation in the public schools at all levels, from graduate and professional to secondary and elementary. In the spring of 1951, NAACP attorneys in Virginia initiated proceedings against the school board of Prince Edward County, one of five suits from around the South ultimately bundled together into Brown v. Board of Education. Virginius Dabney’s greatest fear, so clearly articulated more than a decade before in his response to Charles Houston, had come to fruition.43

Attorneys for the Prince Edward school board understood implicitly that University of Virginia president Colgate Darden—sincere, thoughtful, well respected by both blacks and whites, and a former governor—represented their best hope to defend the validity of segregation. Consequently, when the case came before a panel of federal district court judges, Darden appeared as the key witness for the defendants. In language that surely resonated with Virginius Dabney, Darden spoke in the deeply paternalistic language so central to managed race relations, never conceiving of the issue in terms of the constitutional rights of Virginia’s black citizens but rather in terms of what benefits whites were willing to grant to blacks. The former governor deplored the horrid conditions of the black schools in Prince Edward County, and insisted that whites not only had the capacity but an obligation to provide equal opportunities to black students. He refused to accept, however, that segregation itself guaranteed discrimination; instead Darden expressed publicly his belief that a dual system could be made equal, and that such a system served the best interests of both races.44

In response to the NAACP’s shift in strategy, the Southern Regional Council finally ended its eight-year dance of ambiguity. Late in 1951, as lawyers for the NAACP and Prince Edward County prepared their arguments, the SRC acknowledged what Virginius Dabney and Colgate Darden could not: that segregation and equality were not compatible. In a statement of policy and aims entitled “Toward the South of the Future,” the SRC specifically pledged itself to the creation of a South “where segregation will be recognized as a cruel and needless penalty on the human spirit, and will no longer be imposed; where, above all, every individual will enjoy a full share of dignity and self-respect, in recognition of his creation in the image of God.” Without hesitation, Virginius Dabney, who by this time referred to himself as a conservative, resigned from the SRC, unwilling to lend his support to an organization that openly repudiated segregation. Dabney’s tortured ordeal, to paraphrase historian John Kneebone, had finally come to an end.45

Soon thereafter, a more circumspect Colgate Darden submitted his own resignation. Writing to SRC executive director George Mitchell, Darden acknowledged yet again that for too long segregation had been used “as a shield for discrimination and oppression. For this there is no justification or excuse.” Nevertheless, he remained firmly opposed to the abolition of segregation, especially in the primary and secondary schools. A decent man who cared genuinely about the welfare of the commonwealth’s citizenry, Darden tragically lacked the insight, or the courage, to free himself from the confines of his heritage. Darden continued to claim that the South could eliminate discrimination and provide “an equality of opportunity” while remaining segregated, and yet he knew perfectly well that white southerners lacked the will or inclination to do so.46
Virginia's reputation for good race relations remained relatively intact until the mid-1950s when white Virginians led the white South down the path of massive resistance rather than comply with the Supreme Court's Brown decision. Although Virginius Dabney exhibited little enthusiasm for certain aspects of the massive resistance campaign, and even left many of the Times-Dispatch’s editorials on the subject to a colleague, he defended the commonwealth’s position to a national audience. Writing in Life magazine at the height of the school crisis, Dabney noted that segregation on busses and streetcars had been eliminated in Virginia several years earlier without difficulty. In addition, he acknowledged that a handful of professional schools had been desegregated without incident, a prospect inconceivable to him more than twenty years earlier when Alice Jackson applied to the University of Virginia. Unable to recognize the extent to which his own fears in that case had proven to be a gross exaggeration, Dabney remained convinced that the “education of the races together in the elementary and secondary schools will lead to ultimate interracial amalgamation and make ours a nation of mulattoes.” Moreover, he warned that the “education of the mass of whites and Negroes together in the public schools is the place where the vast majority of white Virginians draw a hard, fast and firm line.” Consequently, Dabney blamed massive resistance on “the extremism of the NAACP” and applauded the Commonwealth of Virginia’s “peaceable, honorable stand.” 47

In April 1956, Virginius Dabney wrote a most revealing letter to George Mitchell. Dabney explained to Mitchell that he had recently come under fire from a “crackpot sheet” published in Newport News that had attempted to brand him an integrationist. In particular, the broadsheet had published a quotation in which Dabney praised the SRC as the “sanest, best-informed Southwide organization dealing with race relations” alongside the SRC’s declaration that “The South of the Future . . . is a South . . . where segregation will be recognized as a cruel and needless penalty on the human spirit, and will no longer be imposed.”48

A SRC pamphlet did, in fact, quote Dabney in the words charged by his accusers. But, as Dabney reminded Mitchell, “I said or wrote it years ago, before the Council came out for integration.” Furthermore, Dabney reiterated that he had worked to prevent the SRC “from passing pro-integration resolutions.” In words that no one could have misinterpreted, Dabney wrote, “To keep the record straight, I have never thought, and do not now think that the South is ready for integration in the public schools. The uproar occasioned by the Supreme Court’s decision, seems to me to bear out the correctness of that view.” Consequently, Dabney asked Mitchell to remove his name and words of support from all subsequent SRC literature.49

Dabney’s letter to Mitchell laid bare his reasons for leaving the SRC in a way that his actual letter of resignation did not. In January 1952, in the wake of the SRC’s explicit rejection of segregation, Dabney informed Mitchell that he must resign because of his “inability to give adequate attention to the organization’s affairs.” Given his repeated warnings over the years that he would resign if the SRC moved to oppose segregation, it is noteworthy that Dabney made no mention of such policy differences when he did resign. But by the time Dabney wrote Mitchell in April 1956, just weeks had passed since Virginia’s senior U. S. Senator, Harry Flood Byrd, first uttered the words “massive resistance.” In this increasingly tense atmosphere, Dabney moved toward a more open embrace of the views held by Senator Byrd and his dominant Organization; by this time, in fact, Dabney had begun to compliment Byrd publicly for his wise and honest leadership.50

Ultimately, Dabney could not move beyond his devotion to Virginia’s tradition of managed race relations in which white elites dictated the pace of change. Even as late as 1962, he continued to blame the NAACP as much as white resisters in Prince Edward for the closing of that county’s public school system. By 1971, Dabney acknowledged in an interview with Morton Sosna that he had come to recognize, in Sosna’s words, that “legalized segregation was an unjust system that ultimately had to be eliminated.” Nevertheless, Dabney continued to express his own personal disapproval of miscegenation, no doubt a comforting position for a man who never recognized that African American aspirations had nothing to do with interracial marriage and sexual relations.51

In the mid-1980s, as massive resistance became a source of considerable embarrassment to eminent Virginians, Virginius Dabney attempted to dismiss it as an aberration from Virginia's heritage of sound leadership and good race relations. Massive resistance, however, was not an aberration at all, but rather a logical response to black demands for change that could not be met within the context of Virginia’s system of race relations. By the 1950s, white Virginians such as Virginius Dabney could no longer pave over the accumulated weight of more than a half-century of irresolvable contradictions. Massive resistance gave the lie to Virginia’s system of managed race relations, but its emptiness had been evident for some time. Although less violent than in other southern states, whites in Virginia proved to be just as committed to segregation, and often less honest with themselves and the black citizens of the commonwealth.52



11. John Kneebone, Southern Liberal Journalists and the Issue of Race, 1920‑1944 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1985), 208.


22. Kneebone, Southern Liberal Journalists, xiii–73; Morton Sosna, In Search of the Silent South: Southern Liberals and the Race Issue (New York: Columbia University Press, 1977), chapter 7; Marie Morris Nitschke, “Virginius Dabney of Virginia: Portrait of a Southern Journalist in the Twentieth Century” (Ph.D. diss.: Emory University, 1987), 1–130; Virginius Dabney, "Negroes and the Franchise: Their Participation in the Primaries," Richmond Times-Dispatch, reprinted in Norfolk Journal and Guide, Sept. 12, 1931, 7 (second and third quotations); "A New Version Of The Negro In Politics," NJG, Sept. 12, 1931, editorial page (first quotation).


33. VD, “Paternalism In Race Relations Is Outmoded,” Southern Frontier 3 (July 1942): 1, 4 (all quotations on 4); Nitschke, “Virginius Dabney of Virginia,” 77–91; Kneebone, Southern Liberal Journalists, 74–96; R. Charlton Wright, “The Southern White Man and the Negro,” Virginia Quarterly Review 9 (April 1933): 175–94. In his attack on paternalism, VD cited William Alexander Percy’s Lanterns on the Levee as the quintessential statement on paternalism. See especially chapter 23. In part, VD’s views on paternalism reflected the influence of Jesse Daniel Ames, the general field secretary of the CIC, who laid out her views in a fascinating letter to VD. See Ames to VD, April 10, 1942, folder “1943–Negroes–Atlanta, Durham, Richmond Conferences (1),” box 5, Virginius Dabney Papers (#7690), University of Virginia. Like VD, Ames was seen as a racial progressive in the 1920s and 1930s, but retreated to the sidelines in the 1940s as African Americans demanded an end to Jim Crow. For more on Ames, see Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, Revolt Against Chivalry.


44. Kneebone, Southern Liberal Journalists, chapter 5; Sosna, In Search of the Silent South, chapter 7.


55. Nitschke, “Virginius Dabney of Virginia,” 77–91 (quotation on 78).


66. VD, “Nearer and Nearer the Precipice,” Atlantic Monthly171 (January 1943): 94‑100 (quotation on 100); Sosna, In Search of the Silent South,131‑34; Kneebone, Southern Liberal Journalists, 208‑209.


77. Sosna, In Search of the Silent South, 130‑135 (quotation on 134); Kneebone, Southern Liberal Journalists, 209‑213; Nitschke, “Virginius Dabney of Virginia,” 157‑162.


88. Ronald L. Heinemann, Depression and New Deal in Virginia (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1983), 1–2; “Not The Virginia Way,” Richmond News Leader, Feb. 9, 1926, 8; “In The Virginia Way,” RNL, Feb. 26, 1926, 8; “This Is Not Like Virginia,” RNL, Sept. 4, 1926, 8; V. O. Key, Jr., Southern Politics in State and Nation (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1949; reprint, Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1984), 19–35 (quotation on 32, note 11). On 35, Key notes that blacks in Virginia also believed that governance should be left to the upper classes. On the more physically oppressive kind of race relations found elsewhere in the South, see Neil R. McMillen, Dark Journey; Grace Elizabeth Hale, Making Whiteness.

My understanding of the attitudes of elite whites in Virginia and their management of white supremacy has been influenced by William Chafe’s discussion of the “progressive mystique” and the tension between “civilities and civil rights” in North Carolina. In many respects, white Virginians who claimed to preside over harmonious race relations shared a great deal with white North Carolinians who believed in their own “progressive mystique.” The major difference between racial paternalists in Virginia and North Carolina lay in their ability to shape a response to the Brown decision. In North Carolina, where political power was more evenly divided between rural and urban interests, whites eschewed massive resistance, in large part by continuing to emphasize civilities, and instead opted for token integration to meet the demands of the courts. In the process they forestalled meaningful change even longer than in Virginia where whites from the Southside counties of the more rural black belt, who enjoyed disproportionate political power, refused to accept any integration anywhere in the state. State and federal courts overturned Virginia’s massive resistance laws and required more accelerated, albeit still relatively slow, integration than in North Carolina. See William H. Chafe, Civilities and Civil Rights: Greensboro, North Carolina, and the Black Struggle for Freedom (New York: Oxford University Press, 1980); Matthew D. Lassiter and Andrew B. Lewis, eds., The Moderates’ Dilemma: Massive Resistance to School Desegregation in Virginia (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1998), 1–4.




99. "Negro Plans Battle in Court to Enter University of Virginia," RTD, Aug. 27, 1935, 1, 3.


1010. “First Negro To Enter Md. State University,” NJG, Sept. 28, 1935, 1; Richard Kluger, Simple Justice (New York: Vintage, 1975), 186–96.


1111. “Our Educational Dilemma and Proposed Court Action as Remedy,” NJG, Aug. 31, 1935, 8; “Let Us Understand Each Other,” NJG, Sept. 7, 1935, 8 (first quotation); “Some Observations On The Discriminatory Public Education System—and Some Recent History,” NJG, Sept. 14, 1935, 11; “NAACP To Stress the Right of Negroes To Enter State Colleges,” Richmond Planet, Sept. 7, 1935, 1; “Badly Advised,” RNL, Aug. 28, 1935, editorial page (second quotation); “Futile and Unwise,” RTD (third quotation) in “Virginia Editors On The Question Of Negroes At The University of Virginia,” NJG, Sept. 7, 1935, 8; “Dislikes Association’s Militant Methods,” Richmond Planet, Sept. 14, 1935, 1; “Negro Plans Battle in Court To Enter University of Virginia,” RTD, Aug. 27, 1935, 1, 3 (fourth and fifth quotations on 3).


1212. “Admission May Be Denied Girl On Technicality,” NJG, Aug. 31, 1935, 1; Raymond Gavins, Perils and Prospects of Southern Black Leadership: Gordon Blaine Hancock, 1884‑1970 (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1977), 95–96; “Application Referred To Board,” Richmond Planet, Sept. 21, 1935, 1; “Final Decision In Univ. Case Up To Trustees,” Norfolk Journal and Guide, Sept. 21, 1935, 1; “Application of Negro Student Rejected By University Board,” RTD, Sept. 20, 1935, 1 (quotation); “Board Rejects Application of Richmond Girl,” NJG, Sept. 28, 1935, 1.


1313. Charles H. Houston, “Educational Inequalities Must Go!” Crisis 42 (October 1935): 300–301, 316; Charles H. Houston, “Cracking Closed Doors,” Crisis 42 (December 1935): 364, 370, 372; “Board Rejects Application of Richmond Girl,” NJG, Sept. 28, 1935, 11 (first quotation); “University of Virginia Case Now Before The NAACP,” Richmond Planet, Sept. 28, 1935, 1; “Student Group at U. of Va. Hits Inequalities,” NJG, Oct. 12, 1935, 11; “White Students Protest U Of Va. Discrimination,” Richmond Planet, Oct. 12, 1935, 1; Patricia Sullivan, Days of Hope (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1996), 82–83; “Best For Both Races,” RTD, Sept. 21, 1935, 6 (second and third quotations). On Houston’s life, see Genna Rae McNeil, Groundwork: Charles Hamilton and the Struggle for Civil Rights.


1414. Josephus Simpson, “An Open Letter To The Times Dispatch,” Richmond Planet, Sept. 28, 1935, 1–2 (all quotations); “A Scare-Crow In Defense Of Jim Crow,” Richmond Planet, Sept. 28, 1935, 12; “Go Forward NAACP And Fight It,” Richmond Planet, Sept. 7, 1935, 1.


1515. “Va. State Grad Study Approved,” NJG, Dec. 21, 1935, 1, 10; “Graduate Instruction at State College,” NJG, Dec. 21, 1935, 8; “Negro Education Bill Is Proposed,” RNL, Feb. 17, 1936, 1; Commonwealth of Virginia, Acts of Assembly, 1936, 561; “30 Negroes Ask Va. School Aid,” RNL, July 27, 1936, 1, 20; “University of Virginia Case,” Richmond Planet, Nov. 30, 1935, 1; “U. Of Va. Fight Discussed By Chas. Houston,” NJG, Dec. 7, 1935, 11; “NAACP To Press Suits,” Richmond Planet, Dec. 21, 1935, 1; “NAACP’s Position On Rights of Negroes In Tax-Supported Schools,” Richmond Planet, Jan. 11, 1936, 1; “Fear Cold Feet In Jackson Case,” Richmond Planet, June 20, 1936; “Charles H. Houston Says NAACP Ready To Go On With Educational Fight,” Richmond Planet, June 27, 1936, 1; “30 Receive Aid Under Virginia’s Jim Crow Set-Up,” Richmond Planet, Aug. 8, 1936, 1.


1616. “30th Annual Conference in Richmond, Va.” Crisis 46 (September 1939): 278–79; Thurgood Marshall, “Equal Justice Under Law,” Crisis 46 (July 1939): 199–201; “Too Radical for Us,” RTD, July 17, 1939, 10 (quotation).


1717. "Too Radical For Us," RTD, July 17, 1939, 10 (quotation); Sosna, In Search of the Silent South, 125‑26.


1818. "Too Radical For Us," RTD, July 17, 1939, 10.

1919. Earl Lewis, In Their Own Interests (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991), 156.

2020. VD to P. B. Young, May 21, 1942 (first and second quotations), VD to Thomas Chappelle, June 25, 1943, folder “1942–43, Negroes: Editorial 1,” box 6, Virginius Dabney Papers (#7690); VD, Across the Years (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1978), 162–63; Howard W. Odum, Race and Rumors of Race (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1943; reprint, with new introduction, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1997), 53–104; Kneebone, Southern Liberal Journalists, 197–99 (third and fourth quotations on 198); Edward L. Ayers, “A Southern Chronicle,” Virginia Quarterly Review 76 (Spring 2000):194–97 (fifth and sixth quotation on 195); Walter White, “Decline of Southern Liberals,” Negro Digest 1 (January 1943): 43 (seventh quotation); John Michael Matthews, “Virginius Dabney, John Temple Graves, and What Happened to Southern Liberalism,” Mississippi Quarterly 45 (Fall 1992): 405–20; Sosna, In Search of the Silent South, 127–33.


2121. Gavins, Perils and Prospects, 112–17 (quotations on 115).

2222. Kneebone, Southern Liberal Journalists, 201–9 (first quotation on 201); Sullivan, Days of Hope, 164; Sosna, In Search of the Silent South, 127–33; Walter White, “The Decline of Southern Liberals,” 43–46 (third quotation on 44); VD, “The Negro and His Schooling,” Atlantic Monthly 169 (April 1942): 459–68; VD, “Nearer and Nearer the Precipice,” 94–100 (second quotation on 98; fourth and fifth quotations on 94).


2323. Kneebone, Southern Liberal Journalists, 201–9; VD, “Nearer and Nearer the Precipice,” 94–100 (quotation on 98); VD, “The Negro and His Schooling,” 467.


2424. Kneebone, Southern Liberal Journalists, 208–9; P. B. Young to VD, Jan. 20, 1943 (first and second quotations), P. B. Young to VD, Jan. 12, 1943 (third and fourth quotations), folder “1942–1943 Negroes: Editorial 1,” box 6, Virginius Dabney Papers; Sosna, In Search of the Silent South, 132–33.


2525. Sosna, In Search of the Silent South, 137–39 (quotations on 138); Kneebone, Southern Liberal Journalists, 198–99, 212. For this concept of the “bogeyman,” I have relied on Kneebone who discusses it in terms of the “cruelly Negrophobic poor white” on 212.


2626. VD to P. B. Young, May 21, 1942, folder “1942–43, Negroes: Editorial 1,” VD to Alice Ware, Jan. 18, 1943 (quotation), folder “1943–44 Negro: Survey Graphic, etc.,” both in box 6, Virginius Dabney Papers; VD, “The Negro and His Schooling,” 459–68; VD, “Nearer and Nearer the Precipice,” 94–100; White, “Decline of Southern Liberals,” 43–46; Kneebone, Southern Liberal Journalists, 196–214; Matthews, “Virginius Dabney, John Temple Graves, and What Happened to Southern Liberalism,” 405–20.


2727. “To Lessen Race Friction,” RTD, Nov. 13, 1943, p. 4 (quotations); Nancy Armstrong, “The Study of an Attempt Made in 1943 to Abolish Segregation of the Races on Common Carriers in the State of Virginia,” Publications of the University of Virginia Phelps-Stokes Fellowship Papers 17 (1950): 62–67, 77–79; Marie Tyler-McGraw, At The Falls (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina, 1994), 274, Earl Lewis, In Their Own Interests, 189–91.


2828. Gunnar Myrdal, An American Dilemma, 635, quoted in Armstrong, “Study of an Attempt,” 78; Earl Lewis, In Their Own Interests, 189–91.


2929. “The Conservative Course in Race Relations,” RTD, Nov. 21, 1943, section 4, 2.


3030. “An Historic Proposal For The Public Welfare,” NJG, Nov. 20, 1943 (national edition), 6; Armstrong, “A Study of an Attempt,” 59–71; Kneebone, Southern Liberal Journalists, 209–12; Gavins, Perils and Prosperity, 147, Sosna, In Search of the Silent South, 134–36.


3131. This synopsis of responses comes from an examination of the 138 letters that VD published in “Voice of the People” on the

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