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THE 1947 - 1949 FREEDOM
TRAIN
MORE THAN A SYMBOL:
UPHOLDING A CREED
In the late 1940's, many
black Americans and other minorities had returned home in the wartime
uniforms of service to their country, only to face the expectation
that they should "know their place" as disenfranchised, second-class
citizens.
Most accounts describe
the opening events of the Civil Rights Movement as beginning a decade
and more after the Freedom Train's historic journey. But the train
played a role in bringing the message of freedom and equality for
all Americans, regardless of race, creed or color.
Birmingham, Alabama was
a scheduled display stop for the Freedom Train. But city officials
there revealed plans for "separate but equal" times for whites and
blacks to visit the train, in accordance with the city's racially
segregated schools, buses, restaurants, and all other facilities
available for public access.
The American Heritage
Foundation, the Freedom Train's operating organization, told the
leaders of Birmingham that such a plan was unacceptable, and an
insult to all that the train represented.
The Freedom Train did
not visit Birmingham, and the resulting message was clear.
Following the incident,
no other city attempted to segregate visitors, and the train hosted
visitors of all races and ethnicity, young and old, in a "priority"
determined only by who arrived first to wait in line. It was a preview
of the America we take for granted today, often without thinking
about a time when equal opportunity and freedom of access were anything
but society's accepted standards.
Far from being a contrived
symbol of an idealized America, the Freedom Train took a proactive
part in the hopes of President Truman and Attorney General Clark
for a national "rededication" and a reckoning by individual citizens
of what it means to be an American and to subscribe to the American
Dream.
Thus, Birmingham – the
display date that was not kept – is a fine representation of the
greatest impact of the Freedom Train.
Text by Mr. Larry Wines.
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