the Brown decision. Robert A. Pratt explores the undercurrents of white opposition to the dismantling of the separate but equal system and analyzes the overall impact of the process on the life of the
city. In doing so he has given us a portrait of a society moving, in some ways, backward in time. Although
Richmond's passive resistance to integration was not unique, it was notable for having occurred within the broader context of statewide massive resistance. The
schools of
Richmond, unlike those in some other localities in Virginia, remained open but segregated, a policy designed to avoid integration without flagrant defiance of the law. By choosing this subtler form of defiance,
city officials were able, in effect, to stave off integration for nearly two decades. The Color of Their Skin also covers
Richmond politics concerning the issue. The clash of conservative idealogues such as James J. Kilpatrick and former governor Mills Godwin with activist black attorneys like Oliver W. Hill and Samuel W. Tucker bred a conservatively moderate element that was represented on the
Richmond school board by the likes of board president (and later Supreme Court Justice) Lewis F. Powell. Powell attempted to chart a course between the extreme factions, a course that Pratt accurately describes as tokenism, since only a handful of blacks was ever admitted to
Richmond's schools until the 1970
school busing decree. Pratt demonstrates howthe impact of
school desegregation was felt beyond the
schools, in the demographics of the
city itself. Because of the glacial slowness of the integration process, intransigent whites had time to flee the
city school system and to establish their children in private or suburban
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