When Franklin Roosevelt was elected president in 1932, Atlanta had
the South's largest population of college-educated African
Americans. The dictates of Jim Crow meant that these men and women
were almost entirely excluded from public life, but as Karen
Ferguson demonstrates, Roosevelt's New Deal opened unprecedented
opportunities for black Atlantans struggling to achieve full
citizenship.
Black reformers, often working within federal agencies as social
workers and administrators, saw the inclusion of African Americans
in New Deal social welfare programs as a chance to prepare black
Atlantans to take their rightful place in the political and social
mainstream. They also worked to build a constituency they could
mobilize for civil rights, in the process facilitating a shift from
elite reform to the mass mobilization that marked the postwar black
freedom struggle.
Although these reformers' efforts were an essential prelude to
civil rights activism, Ferguson argues that they also had lasting
negative repercussions, embedded as they were in the politics of
respectability. By attempting to impose bourgeois behavioral
standards on the black community, elite reformers stratified it
into those they determined deserving to participate in federal
social welfare programs and those they consigned to remain at the
margins of civic life.