Deja Vu at W&M?

Talk about history and Karma. Buried in today’s Richmond Times-Dispatch is a column by librarian Larry Hall who recollects a horrible tale of power elite racism at William & Mary, the nation’s second oldest university that proponents love to dress up in fluffy history and the usual Rights of Man blather.

Hall’s engrossing tale involves a senior at W&M in early 1945 who also edited the student newspaper, The Flat Hat. Marilyn Kaemmerle took some bold risks for the time. In honor of Abraham Lincoln’s birthday, she wrote an editorial that asked why there were no blacks at segregated William & Mary, questionned Southern white perceptions that blacks were physically and mentally inferior and even had the guts to ask why blacks and whites could not intermarry, which was illegal in Virginia at the time. After all, she noted, America was fighting the Nazis at the time over just such issues.

As Hall notes, Kaemmerle was anxious to spark discussion but a silence became defeaning. As a student from Michigan, Kaemmerle may have misjudged just how deep institutional racism was in the South at the time. Free speech, the lifeblood of any university, did not exist for some topics in the Old Dominion, mother of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and all those other brave patriots and fighters for human rights that the old, white “Virginians” love to bring up all the time.

Then, in an eerie way reminiscent of the recent controversy over former W&M President Gene R. Nichol, the Board of Visitors struck. Egged on by rector J. Gordon Bohannon of Petersburg, who opined that “a girl who reflects such heresies is not a proper person to be editor,” the board pushed the school to suspend the newspaper and fire Kaemmerle as editor.

Just as in the Nichol case 63 years later, students angrily protested, but the crackdown was complete. Kaemmerle’s brave ideas almost caused her expulsion, but the effort failed when board member threatened to resign if it happened. She was allowed to graduate. Once again, eerie flashbacks. Nichol would have been fired outright, too, had it not been for the threat of resignation by a visitor behind the scenes. Still, the powers of Virginia’s ruling elite prevailed – both Kaemmerle and Nichol were out.

There’s one more strange irony here. The Times-Dispatch published the “Time Capsule” with the fascinating Kaemmerle tale. Yet the same newspaper once censored its best editor for questioning the status quo and white supremacy.

Virginius Dabney was one of the best editors the state ever produced. His progressive views and intelligence won national respect for the Times-Dispatch in the middle part of the 20th Century. But the white power elite, of which newspaper owner Tennant Bryan was a part, silenced Dabney when he tried to speak out against the racist and horribly-backward policy of Massive Resistance to desegregation in the 1950s.

As journalists Gene Roberts and Hank Klibanoff note in their excellent 2006 book, “The Race Beat”:

” . . .Virginius Dabney was blocked from opposing massive resistance by Tennant Bryan, the principal owner of Dabney’s Times-Dispatch as as well as (James) Kilpatrick’s News Leader. Bryan and Dabney struck a deal: when the owner wanted militantly segregationist editorials, a business executive with a flair for writing, not Dabney or his editorial staff, would supply them. At one point, Dabney considered leaving his post but got only one nibble, from the Cox papers in Dayton.”

As for Kaemmerle, W&M wrote a letter of reconciliation in 1986, long after the ideas she espoused becme accepted. Jim Crow came to an end by law in the 1960s as did Virginia’s hate-based ban on inter-race marriages. When she died in 2001, an obituary in a newspaper in Arizona where she lived praised her heroism and for being ahead of her time.

As for Nichol, after a few days of thunderous silence, the board announced that he wasn’t that great an administrator and was a lousy fund raiser. The fact that he was an outspoken liberal who challenged long-held views wasn’t a factor in his contract not being renewed, the board claimed.

The cases of Nichol, Dabney, Kaemmerle demonstrate the hideous tendency in Virginia for the power structure to move from the safety of barricaded rooms to punish those who ask too many questions or somehow threaten the status quo, especially when that status quo is so badly flawed. Yet the same power elite will wrap themselves up in history and pompously proclaim just how wonderful their ancestors were and how important forward thinking and equal rights are.

–Peter Galuszka


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Comments

  1. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous

    Fabulous post! BKD

  2. James Atticus Bowden Avatar
    James Atticus Bowden

    PG: Your last paragraph was a bit too much of the broad brush stroke.

    Where is the place in the US, or the world, where a power structure doesn’t strike back when threatened?

    The three cases you tie together because they are in Virginia differ by important degrees. But, frankly, that is less interesting to me than other questions.

    I’ve been wrestling with questions about how much political corruption do we have in Virginia. I see it in HB 3202, but I just don’t know if we have more or less than other states in the Union. I know we do political corruption genteelly without putting money in bags like they do in MD and WVA – and their politicians get caught. I don’t know how much less corruption we can work for realistically, since power corrupts – always.

    My latest read, Albion’s Seed, and my current read, Paul Johnson’s History of the American People both point out the fact that freedom was for some people in Olde Virginia – as you indicated. And it was more freedom than anyone had every known before – anywhere – and sowed the seeds that eventually bore fruit for freedom for all. Those seeds didn’t come from someplace else or some other culture.

  3. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous

    J.A. Bowden,
    I’d like to catch up with Albion’s Seed since I’ve heard good thngs about it. Don’t agree that freedom is now for all. Thanks.

    Peter Galuszka

  4. James Atticus Bowden Avatar
    James Atticus Bowden

    PG: Freedom is a big word with many definitions.

    One of the big themes in the Great Experiment has been the expanding franchise. I think everyone who should be included is enfranchised now.

  5. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous

    Excelent.

    RH

  6. Groveton Avatar

    Well done. Glossing over Virginia’s racist past is an insult to the good men and women who worked and fought to change that racist past. The points in your article are well taken.

    Now for the $64,000 question, “Is racism finally dead in the Commonwealth of Virginia?”.

  7. James Atticus Bowden Avatar
    James Atticus Bowden

    Groveton: Not recognizing what has been accomplished – and fixating only and always on the wrongs is just as wrong-headed as a Pollyanna view of the past. It’s a sophistry called ‘presentism’.

    Name a state that doesn’t have a racist past. Name a country that doesn’t have a racist past or present.

    Racism and racial politics are alive and well in Virginia. They are resident in the ideas of ‘diversity’. They are promoted by liberals in the name of anti-racism which is actually the intolerance of ‘Tolerance’.

  8. James Atticus Bowden Avatar
    James Atticus Bowden

    BKD: Analysis of any simple bi-variate distribution – like cancer deaths, illegitimate babies, prison populations, special forces personnel, SAT scores, etc. etc – which concludes that differences that show up on a color chart are actually caused by the colors are bunk. Empty of meaning.

    If you want to get serious about finding racism today in the Commonwealth, then you need causal analysis – multivariate analysis. I’ve seen none to date. Lots of anecdotal angst, but nothing meaningful.

    Unless,of course, one is guided by feelings, for a given situation alone, rather than by thought.

  9. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous

    You may need regression analysis. Angst does it for me. BKD

  10. James Atticus Bowden Avatar
    James Atticus Bowden

    BKD: Ah, therein lies the difference.

    There is an objective truth worth finding for good governance. We have the freedom that anything can do for our personal lives.

    Now it’s time to sing “Feelings”.

  11. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous

    Sorry, JAB, but there is not enough room in cyberspace to list the “objective” truths debunked by simple angst. BKD

  12. Jim Bacon Avatar
    Jim Bacon

    Marilyn Kaemmerle should be more than a historical footnote. We should add her to the list of heroes (or in her case, heroines) of Virginia’s Civil Rights movement. It is a shame that she is dead. I would like to know what she thought about the controversy she stirred up so long ago and the progress of race relations (or lack of it) in the years since. Thank you, Peter, for bringing her to our attention.

    That said, it seems a stretch to compare what happened to Kaemmerle with what happened to Gene Nichol. Would someone please explain to me what great noble cause Nichol upheld for which he was persecuted by the Board of Visitors? In his post, Peter conflates the W&M Visitors appointed by two recent Democratic governors with a “ruling elite” that includes D. Tennant Bryan (now deceased) who defended Massive Resistance a half century ago. Although the Bryan family still controls the Richmond Times-Dispatch (which now has an African-American as executive editor), Virginia’s “ruling elite” very little resembles the elite of 50 years ago. Peter knows this very well, as editor of Virginia Business magazine he presided over the compilation of the Virginia 100, a list of wealthiest Virginians!

    No one compiled such a list back in 1958, but I dare say that only a handful of individuals (or their progeny) on the list at that time would qualify for it today. The old elite, whose wealth was based largely on land holdings and traditional manufacturing like furniture, textiles and paper mills, has been almost totally displaced by upstart real estate developers and information technology entrepreneurs, mostly from Northern Virginia.

    Even the stodgy, old “elite” of Richmond cannot trace its wealth back to 1958. Fifty years ago, the Ukrop family grocery store business had barely progressed past the mom-and-pop store stage. The Gottwalds hadn’t yet purchased the company that became the Ethyl Corp. The Robins family had barely progressed past the mom-and-pop drugstore stage. Bill Godwin hadn’t graduated from the Darden School. (All those assertions about where the enterprises stood in 1958 need fact checking, but if I’m not exactly right, I’m not far off.) The idea of the Richmond elite, as conservative as it is, as a bunch of ancestor-worshiping holdovers from the Massive Resistance era has little grounding in reality. As for the Northern Virginia business elite, the only ancestor worshipers in that crowd, if any exist at all, are more likely to be Confucian or Hindu than southern Protestant.

    News flash: Virginia’s ruling elite has changed over 50 years — unlike the stereotypes of that elite. The people who refused to renew Nichols’ contract have absolutely nothing in common with the people who persecuted Kaemmerle. Placing the mantle of brave Marilyn Kaemmerle upon the volatile and egotistical Gene Nichol is an insult to Kaemmerle.

  13. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous

    Jim Bacon,
    Thought you were back in Wyoming. You are entitled to your views on Nichol as I am mine, but please don’t become a Sob Sister for the current ruling elite. Yeah, some of changed, but some have not. Simply having money for the “100 Richest Virginians” list for some magazine isn’t the same thing as wielding the same kind of influence I’m talking about. Both of us have been around the fringes long enough to know what I am talking about.

    And so what if the TD has a black editor which is a bit of management PR scheme just as much as their backtracking from the real history of the place. He sure hasn’t improved the newspaper.Quite the contrary.

    Peter Galuszka

  14. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous

    Jim, yeah, well, maybe, but time tempers perspective. “Volitile and temperamental” probably characterized many of the early troublemakers venerated in bronze now. And there was plenty of home grown wealth then that is still around (tobacco and aluminum come to mind. You don’t mention the real match that lit Richmond’s–(and Virginia’s) fuse at the end of Massive Resistence–government spending–on military manufacturing and shipping (that alone made Richmond the fastest growing industrial city in the world at one time, I think about 1946-1947), the Richmond-Petersburg Turnpike (I-95), and the creation of VCU. Same thing today with that rich elite in NOVA. Take away the government spending and you’ve got the Texas panhandle economy. The next statue put up in Richmond should honor Oliver Hill. BKD

  15. Groveton Avatar

    “Name a state that doesn’t have a racist past.”.

    Not the point. The movie “Remember the Titans” chronicled the city of Alexandria’s public high school desegregation. It was set in 1971. The final court order in the Richmond area’s school desegration fight was issued in 1986. The only school district in the United States to close its entire system rather than integrate was Prince Edward County, VA. The schools were closed from 1959 – 1964. They were only reopened when the county supervisors were threatened with jail time if they continued to defy court orders to reopen.

    The depth of Virginia’s racism was considerably worse than that of the average state. Pretending otherwise is a sophistry called “being in denial”.

  16. James Atticus Bowden Avatar
    James Atticus Bowden

    Remember the Titans was Hollywood fiction. Ask around. Arlington, Alexandria and Fairfax were integrated long before 1971. I went to integrated Jr High when I came back from Europe in 1964. The about TC Williams that was true was how to integrate the staffs and traditions when two high schools merge.

    A Brigade of the 82nd Airborne Division was put on alert to go stop the rioting in Boston in 1974 about integrating South Boston High School. That is fact.

    If you have a scale for state racism – and disaggregate it and date it for all time, or for one year,or one event etc – I’d sure like to see it.

    Let’s pretend there is an average state racism…tbd…and Virginia was above it or below it as experts on racism (I always defer to Liberals on this – they are professionals) then so what?

    What does it mean today? Or, are you saying that Virginia is above or below some standard of racism today for states?

  17. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous

    I have to conjcede that J.A. Bowden is right here. I graduated from high school in the DC area in 1970, albeit from a private school, but integregation overall had happened quite a while before. I was amazed that the football movie was set in 1971, not 1961 or earlier.
    Re: Boston. I graduated from a Boston area college in spring 1974. I had taken a lot of crap from kids from the burbs of Boston and New York since my family lived in Carolina then, lo, turned out that Boston, that shining beacon of justice, had the worst session of racist reaction to court-ordered busing anywhere in the U.S. in 1974. Not that I am against busing, just the white sanctimony.

    Peter Galuszka

  18. James Atticus Bowden Avatar
    James Atticus Bowden

    PG: What private HS? I’m Yorktown HS ’68 – Arlington. You and Jim Bacon probably graduated the same year – but Jim was Woodrow Wilson HS, DC.

  19. Groveton Avatar

    You guys are funny! Groveton is the high school I attended in Fairfax County. It is directly south of TC Williams along Rt 1. We were the team with the Gs on their helmets who broke the original quarterback’s leg in that movie. In fact, the linebacker from Groveton who broke the QB’s leg was wearing #54. I would wear that jersey a few years later. Our high school, like all Fairfax County high schools, was integrated in 1963. By the time Remember the Titans was set (1971) we had many black students and many black players on our football team. So, I am pretty well versed in the absurdity of that movie. When the coach talks about going to the “all white schools in the county” it is a work of pure fantasy. However, the city of Alexandria was a hotbed of segregation which was not desegegated until 1970 – 1971. That much of the film is completely true.

    I believe that Virginia has been historically slow to make the changes required in order to have a just society. We’re definitely getting there but we have been historically slow.

    So, who cares?

    A lot of people care. A lot of people (like me – a life long Virginian) think that there are still vestiges of racism in Virginia. It was only about 18 months ago that the sitting senator from Virginia (and former governor) called a young native Virginian “mecaca” (spanish for monkey as I understand it). Unlike George Allen the young man who was insulted was born in Virginia. In George Allen’s mind the young man became “mecaca” beacuse he is of Indian ancestry.

    In Prince William County there is a substantial debate about illegal immigration. Personally, I think the anti-illegal immigrant group has some good points. Unfortunatley, those good points are sometimes overshadowed by racist rhetoric. Most of the anti-illegal immigrant people are logical, calm folks who don’t seem racist at all. However, there are a few people in that crowd who make comments that do sound racist. And when the national MSM covers the debate in Prince William County – guess who they feature? And when corporate executives think about where to locate their “creative class” operations – guess what they remember?

    Racism is immoral. It is also bad for business – at the state level. Virginia earned the reputation of racism over the years. While that has largely ended it did not end all that long ago. We need to be “squeaky clean” now in order to overcome the negative view that many people still have regarding Virginia.

  20. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous

    J.A. Bowden,
    I was a boarder at Georgetown Prep, Class of 70. Bacon graduated a year later from St. Albans where the true elite go. I never knew Jim but we did smash them at football on a regular basis.
    Groveton, you are right that movie history is irrelevant and that plenty of problems persist in Virginia and still do today.

    Peter Galuszka

  21. Jim Bacon Avatar
    Jim Bacon

    I attended an integrated public school in Washington, D.C. when I was in 1st grade. That would have been around 1960. I had no sense of politics at age 7, but I presume that the district was integrated at that time. As Peter noted, I went to St. Albans, commonly referred to as an “elite” Episcopalian prep school. (Al Gore graduated four years before me.) And, yes, Georgetown Prep did crush our fotball team on a regular basis. And our cross country team, too, as I recall. But everyone needs to know that Georgetown Prep was the “elite” Catholic school in the D.C. area, and Peter is just as much of an elitist as me!

    Back to the discussion thread: I don’t remember a time when St. Albans wasn’t integrated. There weren’t many African Americans, but there were always a few. Most of the African American kids (but not all) were on scholarships.

    One thing that always impressed me about the St. Albans approach to integration: We didn’t have tokens. Every African-American kid at the school was every bit as smart and qualified to be there as every white kid. One especially bright and charismatic kid went on to become a well known Harvard Law School professor. Some of you might have heard of him: Randall Kennedy.

  22. Groveton Avatar

    Georgetown Prep? St Albans?

    Wow – so it’s Groveton the NoVA guy who qualifies as the “resident redneck” on BaconsRebellion?

  23. James Atticus Bowden Avatar
    James Atticus Bowden

    More old times in the not-hood stuff. My public high school competed against St Albans in some sports. I ran cross-country my Senior year against St Albans at their school in our 0-18 ‘rebuilding’ year.

    Groveton, I agree that racism is immoral. I call it sinful. That is from my particular religious world view. Which is why I oppose the inherent racism in ‘Diversity’ policies as they exist today. As well as set asides, affirmative action that is a quota, etc – based on race.

    Please don’t use the maccaca moment as proof of racism or the fringe against illegal aliens.

    George Allen was guilty of hubris, not racism, in picking on that kid in public. Maccaca is an invention of political operatives – not a real slur. It was stupid, not sinful, and he paid for it.

    The anti-illegals, like me, have to disassociate ourselves from racist statements of others. Not hard to do.

    DC is the New Rome. Money and power gravitate to it. Those businesses will go to NoVa. The incentive to do rightly in race relations isn’t to bring in more business, but simply to do right. It’s a moral, not a material, imperative.

    Groveton: I went to public schools too in NoVa.

  24. Groveton Avatar

    Let me get this straight – Georgetown Prep and St Albans are the premier private schools in DC? So, why am I spending a small fortune to send one of my sons to Gonzaga? The jesuits all tell me that Gonzaga is great. And as for the sports … the Gonzaga Eagles seem to be able to hold their own. This year their basketball team was rated something like #4 in the United States.

    As for integration, Gonzaga appears to be pretty well integrated. I have no idea whether the African American students are on scholarship or not. All I know is that the student body seems pretty diverse and everybody gets along with everybody – at least within Gonzaga. Now, if you ask the good men from Gonzaga about St John’s or Georgetown Prep or ….

  25. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous

    Groveton,
    The Gonzaga propaganda is that they are actually much brighter and that we’re the country club types.
    That, of course, is utter nonsense.
    As far as Bacon, Albans is the elite of the elite, the creme de la creme. The Al Gore of DC boys schools (he went there! What an inconvenient truth!)

    Peter Galuszka

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