"Swanson said in the Post article that he had known “there might be reactions, no matter how covert, to my admission, but I felt I was adequately prepared to meet them. There was no incident, however. I was well received and courteously treated.” But in an Oct. 5, 1950, letter to one of his Howard friends, Swanson revealed that he also felt uneasy. “I have not been able to detect any perceptible indications of hostility or bias; it is one of those things in the under-current. You can’t put your finger on it, but you know that it is there.” When Swanson applied to UVA, graduate-level desegregation was on the horizon. The 1948 Supreme Court case Sipuel v. Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma established that states had to provide black college students with access to schools of equal quality, or admit them to schools designated for whites. After the decision, plaintiff Ada Sipuel, a black prospective graduate law student, was admitted to Oklahoma’s law school because the state did not already have such a program available for African-Americans. Since Virginia had the state’s only graduate legal program, Darden and Law Dean F.D.G Ribble ’21 began planning for a qualified applicant like Swanson shortly after Sipuel, according to Professor J. Gordon Hylton ’77, an expert on the Law School’s history. Two other cases involving race in graduate education, Sweatt v. Painter and McLaurin v. Oklahoma State Board of Regents, were pending at the Supreme Court when Swanson’s application came to the attention of University leadership. UVA waited for decisions in those cases — both of which were decided in June 1950 in favor of the African-American plaintiffs. Despite these decisions, the University took the public position that it could not admit Swanson because of his race and denied his application. In the midst of a financial crisis, school officials feared that integrating proactively would lead to a backlash from lawmakers who held the purse strings, and that white students might enroll elsewhere. So the University would only admit Swanson through a court order, Hylton said. The University’s lawyers, Charles Venable “Ven” Minor ’25 and Virginia Attorney General J. Lindsay Almond Jr. ’23, maintained the position as the case progressed that the court ruling be limited to graduate students. Spottswood Robinson, Swanson’s principal lawyer, originally pushed for the entire University to be integrated, Hylton said. Though that didn’t happen, Swanson was still the first student known to break the color line at a college in a former Confederate state."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Eric Williamson, The Long Walk: What Life Was Like for Gregory Swanson, the Lawyer Who Integrated UVA, UVA Lawyer, Spring 2018
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/University_of_Virginia_School_of_Law
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
University of Virginia School of Law
4 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by University of Virginia School of Law →
Related Quotes
"In 1949, Gregory Hayes Swanson took his first step toward integrating the University of Virginia and becoming a civil…"
"Swanson was not segregated in the classroom or at the events he attended. Professor Leslie Buckler, the director of t…"
"Like many of his law graduate peers during the period, Swanson never turned in the paper that would have allowed his …"
"The great power for good which the University of Virginia has exercised, during these first one hundred years, is too…"
"I’d also like to thank the Board of Visitors. Board of Visitors, of course that name goes all the way back to your fo…"
"And I just want to say the students at UVA are incredible. The men are all gentlemen and the women are all the most b…"
"But of course, the greatest figure associated with UVA is your founder, Thomas Jefferson. TJ. Prez Tommy Jef. The fre…"
"So have the courage to follow the example of your founder, Thomas Jefferson, the greatest mind of that most daring ge…"
"Have there been any threats to classroom freedom at the University of Virginia? Not really. A couple of years ago, th…"
"Who is the hero of “Paradise Lost”? There are many candidates. The Son of God, who redeems mankind? Eve, who eats the…"