Collected columns from an editor and activist for
integration and racial tolerance in the South
Ralph McGill (1898–1969) was the editor in
chief of the Atlanta Constitution during the
turbulent years of the civil rights movement that
followed Brown v. Board of Education, and he became an outspoken advocate for integration and racial
tolerance in the South. In this Southern Classics edition,
Angie Maxwell offers a new critical introduction
that analyzes McGill's as an activist and advocate for
social change. The editorials that compose A Church,
a School marked McGill's emergence as a prolific
advocate of nonviolence and social responsibility and
evidenced the progressive values of the Constitution.
A Church, a School contains twenty-nine editorials
that elucidate the historical record of liberal Southern
participation in the civil rights movement. This is
not a record of what happened in the South in the
late 1950s; rather it is a map of the intellectual and
psychological terrain that liberal journalists, such as
McGill, traveled and the obstacles they encountered.
Ralph McGill was an editor and publisher of the
Atlanta Constitution who was best known as a leading
voice for racial and ethnic tolerance in the South from
the 1940s through the 1960s. He was awarded the
Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Writing in 1959, at the age
of sixty-one.
Angie Maxwell is the Diane D. Blair Professor of
Southern Studies and an assistant professor of political
science at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville.
She is the coeditor of Unlocking V. O. Key Jr.: Southern
Politics for the Twenty-First Century and The Ongoing
Burden of Southern History: Politics and Identity in the
Twenty-First-Century South.
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