
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
There were riots when the first black student was enrolled at the University of Mississippi in the American south in October 1962. Mississippi's white segregationist governor only allowed James Meredith to be admitted after President John F Kennedy himself intervened. Louise Hidalgo has been talking to Norma Watkins, the daughter of the governor's lawyer, about that watershed moment and about growing up in one of America's most segregated states.
Picture: James Meredith walks to class at Ole Miss university accompanied by US marshals, October 1st 1962 (Credit: Marion S Trikosko courtesy of Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division, Washington)
5
77 ratings
There were riots when the first black student was enrolled at the University of Mississippi in the American south in October 1962. Mississippi's white segregationist governor only allowed James Meredith to be admitted after President John F Kennedy himself intervened. Louise Hidalgo has been talking to Norma Watkins, the daughter of the governor's lawyer, about that watershed moment and about growing up in one of America's most segregated states.
Picture: James Meredith walks to class at Ole Miss university accompanied by US marshals, October 1st 1962 (Credit: Marion S Trikosko courtesy of Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division, Washington)
5,411 Listeners
1,835 Listeners
7,744 Listeners
3,205 Listeners
77 Listeners
303 Listeners
504 Listeners
1,769 Listeners
1,081 Listeners
292 Listeners
957 Listeners
1,950 Listeners
1,053 Listeners
1,906 Listeners
592 Listeners
709 Listeners
865 Listeners
821 Listeners
589 Listeners
4,616 Listeners
1,086 Listeners
757 Listeners
2,996 Listeners
2,918 Listeners