From Library Journal
Attorney Gardner, an adjunct professor at Georgetown University, crafts a persuasive brief to argue that Harry Truman was the 20th century's best president in terms of civil rights the true successor to the Great Emancipator. His provincial Missouri background notwithstanding, Truman was influenced by his World War II experiences and voracious reading to become a presidential champion of human rights. Gardner cites Truman's American human rights "firsts," among them that he was the first president to accept an invitation from the NAACP and the first to have an integrated inaugural in segregated Washington, DC. Truman sustained his human rights record throughout his seven-year presidency, naming the first African American to the federal bench, ending segregation in the armed forces and the federal civil service, opening the capital's public swimming pools to black families in 1950, and delivering the 1953 Howard University commencement address. More problematic is the author's argument that Truman's Supreme Court appointees especially Chief Justice Fred Vinson and Tom Clark laid judicial groundwork for the famous Brown v. Board of Education decision. Here, Gardner's assessment contradicts prevailing scholarly consensus. Regardless of who is right on this point, however, Gardner's first book is highly recommended for all libraries. William D. Pederson, Louisiana State Univ. in Shreveport
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
Review
An insightful new book, Gardner recasts Truman as a 20th century giant for his forthright stance on the issue. --
Kansas City Sun, March 3, 2002Gardner's first book is highly recommended for all libraries. --
Library Journal, March 1, 2002Gardner's new book illuminates the challenges and triumphs of Truman's presidency and his vigilant crusade for equal rights. --
Baltimore Afro-American, March 9, 2002This is a compelling argument presented by the author. --
Foreward, Spring Announcement Issue 2002
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