Sarah Patton Boyle: Difference between revisions

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One such article published in the ''Saturday Evening Post'' resulted in local white supremacist groups burning a cross in her yard. Boyle was the first white person to join the Charlottesville NAACP. She also denounced massive resistance in front of the General Assembly. Her 1962 autobiography ''The Desegregated Heart'' additionally brought her national attention.   
One such article published in the ''Saturday Evening Post'' resulted in local white supremacist groups burning a cross in her yard. Boyle was the first white person to join the Charlottesville NAACP. She also denounced massive resistance in front of the General Assembly. Her 1962 autobiography ''The Desegregated Heart'' additionally brought her national attention.   


===1962 NAACP speech===
==Notable events==
Boyle spoke to the Charlottesville branch of the NAACP in September 1960. <ref>{{cite-progress-lindsay|title=Both Races Need Integration, Mrs. Sarah Boyle Contends|url=https://search.lib.virginia.edu/sources/uva_library/items/uva-lib:2646390|author=|pageno=|printdate=September 16, 1960|publishdate=September 16, 1960|accessdate=September 15, 2022}}</ref>
* [[October 27]], [[1960]] &ndash; Black high school students protest at the [[Barracks Road Shopping Center]] and picketed Rose's after being refused service at the lunch counter. They leave after thirty minutes after the manager and treasurer of the [[Thomas Jefferson Corporation]] convince them they are on private property and not a city street. The students are accompanied by several adults such as NAACP president [[Eugene Williams]], the Reverend [[James Hamilton]] of [[Mount Zion Baptist Church]], and [[Sarah Patton Boyle]]. <ref>{{cite-progress-lindsay|title=Negro Students Picket Rose's|url=https://search.lib.virginia.edu/sources/uva_library/items/uva-lib:2647361|author=|pageno=3|printdate=October 28, 1960|publishdate=October 28, 1960|accessdate=October 27, 2022}}</ref>
 
* September 1960 &ndash; Boyle spoke to the Charlottesville branch of the NAACP in September 1960. <ref>{{cite-progress-lindsay|title=Both Races Need Integration, Mrs. Sarah Boyle Contends|url=https://search.lib.virginia.edu/sources/uva_library/items/uva-lib:2646390|author=|pageno=|printdate=September 16, 1960|publishdate=September 16, 1960|accessdate=September 15, 2022}}</ref>


== Frances Brand portrait ==
== Frances Brand portrait ==

Latest revision as of 11:24, 27 October 2022

Sarah Patton Boyle (1906-1994) was a civil rights activist and author.

Her desegregation efforts began in 1950 when she wrote to Gregory Swanson, welcoming him as the University of Virginia‘s first Black law student. When Swanson was offended by her condescension and disappointed by her belief in gradual desegregation, Boyle began meeting with local African American news editor Thomas Jerome Sellers for advice. Boyle grew more radical after her exchange with Swanson, and began writing letters to the editor and articles advocating for immediate integration.

One such article published in the Saturday Evening Post resulted in local white supremacist groups burning a cross in her yard. Boyle was the first white person to join the Charlottesville NAACP. She also denounced massive resistance in front of the General Assembly. Her 1962 autobiography The Desegregated Heart additionally brought her national attention.

Notable events

  • September 1960 – Boyle spoke to the Charlottesville branch of the NAACP in September 1960. [2]

Frances Brand portrait

Boyle is one of several people commemorated by the late 20th-century artist Frances Brand as part of her Firsts series.[3]

Portrait of Sarah Patton Boyle painted by Frances Brand
Portrait of Sarah Patton Boyle painted by Frances Brand


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References

  1. Web. Negro Students Picket Rose's, Daily Progress Digitized Microfilm, Lindsay family, October 28, 1960, retrieved October 27, 2022. Print. October 28, 1960 page 3.
  2. Web. Both Races Need Integration, Mrs. Sarah Boyle Contends, Daily Progress Digitized Microfilm, Lindsay family, September 16, 1960, retrieved September 15, 2022.
  3. Branigan, Michelle Marie (December 1998). A Biography of Frances Brand, an American Painter and Social Activist (PhD). Indiana University.

External Links