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Unexampled Courage: the Blinding of Sgt. Isaac Woodard and Awakening President Harry S. Truman Judge J. Waties Waring

Current price: $19.99
Unexampled Courage: the Blinding of Sgt. Isaac Woodard and Awakening President Harry S. Truman Judge J. Waties Waring
Unexampled Courage: the Blinding of Sgt. Isaac Woodard and Awakening President Harry S. Truman Judge J. Waties Waring

Barnes and Noble

Unexampled Courage: the Blinding of Sgt. Isaac Woodard and Awakening President Harry S. Truman Judge J. Waties Waring

Current price: $19.99

Size: Audiobook

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*The book that inspired the 2021 PBS American Experience documentary,
The Blinding of Isaac Woodard.*
How the blinding of Sergeant Isaac Woodard changed the course of America’s civil rights history.
Richard Gergel’s
Unexampled Courage
details the impact of the blinding of Sergeant Woodard on the racial awakening of President Truman and Judge Waring, and traces their influential roles in changing the course of America’s civil rights history.
On February 12, 1946, Sergeant Isaac Woodard, a returning, decorated African American veteran, was removed from a Greyhound bus in Batesburg, South Carolina, after he challenged the bus driver’s disrespectful treatment of him. Woodard, in uniform, was arrested by the local police chief, Lynwood Shull, and beaten and blinded while in custody.
President Harry Truman was outraged by the incident. He established the first presidential commission on civil rights and his Justice Department filed criminal charges against Shull. In July 1948, following his commission’s recommendation, Truman ordered an end to segregation in the U.S. armed forces. An all-white South Carolina jury acquitted Shull, but the presiding judge, J. Waties Waring, was conscience-stricken by the failure of the court system to do justice by the soldier. Waring described the trial as his “baptism of fire,” and began issuing major civil rights decisions from his Charleston courtroom, including his 1951 dissent in
Briggs v. Elliott
declaring public school segregation per se unconstitutional. Three years later, the Supreme Court adopted Waring’s language and reasoning in
Brown v. Board of Education
.

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