In 1964 a small group of African American men in Jonesboro,
Louisiana, defied the nonviolence policy of the mainstream civil
rights movement and formed an armed self-defense organization--the
Deacons for Defense and Justice--to protect movement workers from
vigilante and police violence. With their largest and most famous
chapter at the center of a bloody campaign in the Ku Klux Klan
stronghold of Bogalusa, Louisiana, the Deacons became a popular
symbol of the growing frustration with Martin Luther King Jr.'s
nonviolent strategy and a rallying point for a militant
working-class movement in the South.
Lance Hill offers the first detailed history of the Deacons for
Defense and Justice, who grew to several hundred members and
twenty-one chapters in the Deep South and led some of the most
successful local campaigns in the civil rights movement. In his
analysis of this important yet long-overlooked organization, Hill
challenges what he calls "the myth of nonviolence--the idea that a
united civil rights movement achieved its goals through nonviolent
direct action led by middle-class and religious leaders. In
contrast, Hill constructs a compelling historical narrative of a
working-class armed self-defense movement that defied the
entrenched nonviolent leadership and played a crucial role in
compelling the federal government to neutralize the Klan and uphold
civil rights and liberties.