Through a reexamination of the earliest struggles against Jim Crow,
Blair Kelley exposes the fullness of African American efforts to
resist the passage of segregation laws dividing trains and
streetcars by race in the early Jim Crow era.
Right to Ride
chronicles the litigation and local organizing against segregated
rails that led to the
Plessy v. Ferguson decision in 1896
and the streetcar boycott movement waged in twenty-five southern
cities from 1900 to 1907. Kelley tells the stories of the brave but
little-known men and women who faced down the violence of lynching
and urban race riots to contest segregation.
Focusing on three key cities--New Orleans, Richmond, and
Savannah--Kelley explores the community organizations that bound
protestors together and the divisions of class, gender, and
ambition that sometimes drove them apart. The book forces a
reassessment of the timelines of the black freedom struggle,
revealing that a period once dismissed as the age of accommodation
should in fact be characterized as part of a history of protest and
resistance.