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Sixty
years ago, when Truman Gibson reported for duty at the War
Department, Washington, D.C. was a southern city in its
unbending segregation as well as in its steamy summers.
Gibson had no illusions, but as someone who'd enjoyed the
best of the vibrant black culture of prewar America, he was
shocked to find the worst of the Jim Crow South in the
nation's capital. What Gibson accomplished as an advocate
for African American soldiers-first as a lawyer working for
the Secretary of War, then as a member of President Truman's
"Black Cabinet"--is a large part of the history of the
struggle for civil rights in the American military; and it
is a compelling part of the story that Gibson tells in this
book, a memoir of a life spent making a difference in the
world one step at a time.
A graduate of the University of Chicago
Law School, Gibson took his fight for racial justice to the
corridors of powers, arguing against restrictive real estate
covenants before the U.S. Supreme Court, opposing such
iconic figures as Generals Dwight Eisenhower and George C.
Marshall in campaigning for the integration of the armed
forces, and challenging white control of professional sports
by creating a boxing promotion empire that made television
history. A firsthand account of the nitty-gritty of
twentieth-century race relations in the worlds of law, the
military, sports, and entertainment, Gibson's memoir is also
an engaging recollection of encounters with the likes of
Thurgood Marshall, W. E. B. DuBois, Eleanor Roosevelt,
George Patton, Jackie Robinson, and Joe Louis, among others.
As a historical record and as an intimate look at a bygone
era with all its charms and hardships, the book is an
essential chapter in our nation's story.
"This informative book is a time capsule covering many rich
experiences of one man over nine decades. In addition to
recounting his participation in the successful struggle to
desegregate the armed forces, Mr. Gibson takes the reader
along on a grand tour of his interactions with many key
figures in the political, military, business, sports, and
entertainment worlds of the 20th century." --Jimmy Carter
"Gibson entertains and enlightens in recollecting the living
detail of the national capital, the nation itself, and many
of its iconic figures in the hard-fought struggle to
desegregate. His is an important addition to the historical
record. . ." --Library Journal, starred review
"Knocking Down Barriers is a wonderful book ripe with
stories and insights that illuminate many of the dark
corners of America's struggle for integration and racial
justice during the 1930s and 1940s. While this engagingly
written memoir explores the intersection of race, sports,
entertainment, and law, Gibson's greatest contribution is
his recollections of the personalities, debates, and
barriers in the battle to integrate the armed forces.
Gibson's words help us to better understand the difficulties
and the ultimate importance of the successful challenge to a
segregated military and how those actions helped create an
environment that stimulated and supported the nascent civil
rights movement. This is a must-read." --Lonnie G. Bunch,
President, Chicago Historical Society
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