scrollwork top

A Thoughtful Spot

curl left 27thday ofJanuaryin the year2012 curl right
¤
top border
bottom border

istalksnape:

The love story that changed history: Fascinating photographs of interracial marriage at a time when it was banned in 16 states

Just 45 years ago, 16 states deemed marriages between two people of different races illegal.

But in 1967, the U.S. Supreme Court considered the case of Richard Perry Loving, who was white, and his wife, Mildred Loving, of African American and Native American descent.

The case changed history - and was captured on film by LIFE photographer Grey Villet, whose black-and-white photographs are now set to go on display at the International Center of Photography.

Twenty images show the tenderness and family support enjoyed by Mildred and Richard and their three children, Peggy, Sidney and Donald.

The children, unaware of the struggles their parents face, are captured by Villet as blissfully happy as they play in the fields near their Virginia home or share secrets with their parents on the couch.

Their parents, caught sharing a kiss on their front porch, appear more worry-stricken.

And it is no wonder - eight years prior, the pair had married in the District of Columbia to evade the Racial Integrity Act of 1924, which banned any white person marrying any non-white person.

But when they returned to Virginia, police stormed into their room in the middle of the night and they were arrested.

The pair were found guilty of miscegenation in 1959 and were each sentenced to one year in prison, suspended for 25 years if they left Virginia.

They moved back to the District of Columbia, where they began the long legal battle to erase their criminal records - and justify their relationship.

Following vocal support from the Presbyterian and Roman Catholic churches, the Lovings won the fight - with the Supreme Court branding Virginia’s anti-miscegenation law unconstitutional in 1967.

It wrote in its decision: ‘Marriage is one of the basic civil rights of man, fundamental to our very existence and survival.

‘To deny this fundamental freedom on so unsupportable a basis as the racial classifications embodied in these statutes, classifications so directly subversive of the principle of equality at the heart of the Fourteenth Amendment, is surely to deprive all the State’s citizens of liberty without due process of law.’ [Read more

I studied this case :)

(Source: blackndns)

  1. penis-booty reblogged this from sexta-espada
  2. ladyofthecamellias reblogged this from cyberneticlovesound
  3. sexta-espada reblogged this from blackandwhiteomnivouriousbear
  4. blackandwhiteomnivouriousbear reblogged this from cyberneticlovesound
  5. cyberneticlovesound reblogged this from bambithesleaze
  6. melyssajayluvsrobby reblogged this from blackgirlswhiteboys
  7. woodhouseing reblogged this from catch-the-trade-winds
  8. play-till-death reblogged this from blackndns
  9. cynicteecrumpet reblogged this from eternallyseeking
  10. rebellookingforacause reblogged this from eternallyseeking
  11. lilatov reblogged this from arisakono and added:
    Too, too beautiful.
  12. eternallyseeking reblogged this from smithmisc
  13. snowguardian reblogged this from ragdolleopard
  14. axelfar reblogged this from ragdolleopard
  15. con35ymas reblogged this from theressomethingaboutmimi
  16. quondamdreams reblogged this from ragdolleopard
  17. ragdolleopard reblogged this from paulyoucana
  18. paulyoucana reblogged this from jujujordan and added:
    How pertinent this is in modern times. Why are we always fighting the same battles, only in different contexts?
  19. jujujordan reblogged this from theressomethingaboutmimi
  20. zosozeppelin87 reblogged this from sharlynharris
  21. theressomethingaboutmimi reblogged this from rudolove
  22. smokeandthecigarette reblogged this from rudolove
  23. uselesstogrowolder reblogged this from arisakono
  24. sharlynharris reblogged this from rudolove
  25. rudolove reblogged this from blackndns and added:
    Just 45 years ago, 16 states deemed marriages between two people of different races illegal. But in 1967, the U.S....
  26. ohokaybien reblogged this from sucka-emcee
  27. ehrevelry reblogged this from sucka-emcee
scrollwork bottom
Theme by Robert Boylan   //   Driven by Tumblr.com