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Wednesday, January 22, 2020

Resolving the Southern Race Problem, Jan. 21, 1920


From The Pinehurst Outlook, Jan. 21, 1920, Herbert W. Sugden, editor

A Southern Race Problem

Recognizing that the negro is a permanent and increasingly important factor in the development of our national life, The Southern Sociological Congress considers the solution of the problem of race relations as the most delicate and difficult single task for the American Democracy. No enduring basis of good-will between the white and colored peoples of this country can be developed except on the fundamental principles of justice, cooperation, and racial integrity. The obligations of this generation to posterity demand that we exert our utmost endeavor to preserve the purity of our democratic ideals expressed in the American Constitution as well as the purity of the blood of both races.

With this belief the Southern Sociological Congress has worked out the following program for the improvement of race relations. This we submit, having in mind particularly the recent lynching in Franklin County, which aroused Governor Bickett and brought forth a fiery denunciation from him.

The Program

The Negro should be liberated from the blighting fear of injustice and mob violence. To this end it is imperatively urgent that lynching be prevented.

--By the enlistment of Negroes themselves in preventing crimes that provoke mob violence.

--By the prompt trial and speedy execution of persons guilty of heinous crimes.

--By legislation that will make it unnecessary for a woman who has been assaulted to appear in court to testify publicly.

--By legislation that will give the governor authority to dismiss a sheriff for failure to protect a prisoner in his charge.

The citizenship rights of the Negro should be safeguarded, particularly

--By securing proper traveling accommodations.

--By providing better housing conditions and preventing extortionate rents.

--By providing adequate educational and recreational facilities.

Closer cooperation between white and colored citizens should be promoted, without encouraging any violation of race integrity.

--By organizing local committees, both white and colored, in as many communities as possible for the consideration of inter-racial problems.

--By the employment of Negro physicians, nurses, and policemen as far as practicable to work for sanitation, public health, and law enforcement among their own people.

--By enlisting all agencies possible in fostering justice, good-will and kindliness in all individual dealings of the members of one race with members of the other.

--By the appointment of a standing committee by the governor of each state for the purpose of making a careful study of the causes underlying race friction with the view of recommending proper means for their removal.


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