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Beyond the Burning Bus: The Civil Rights Revolution in a Southern Town

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A retired minister recounts the 1961 firebombing of a Freedom Riders bus by the Ku Klux Klan in Anniston, Alabama, and the city's then unique response of forming a biracial Human Relations Council, which the author chaired. Includes period photos. Annotation (c) Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

168 pages, Hardcover

First published October 1, 2003

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Phil Noble

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Drick.
905 reviews25 followers
June 28, 2015
On Mother's Day 1961, Anniston, AL made the national news when a bus filled with Freedom Riders heading out of Anniston to Birmingham was set on fire by a group of local members of the KKK. Riders on the bus escaped alive but many were badly injured. Following this incident two black ministers called on Rev. Phil Noble to discuss how the churches - Black and White - could work together to bring racial justice to Anniston. This books tells the story of the courageous men who made up Anniston's Human Relations Council - purportedly the first in a Southern city - led by the author Rev. Noble. This book relates the first two years of the Council's work made up of 5 Whites and 4 Black to begin to bring down the walls of segregation. For Rev. Noble and the other white members the goal was progress with limited violence, for the blacks the progress was too slow but enough to keep them engaged. The book is written obviously from Noble's White perspective, but shows what happens when courageous Whites joined their Black counterparts to work for the justice all knew to be necessary. At the same time Dr. King was decrying the inaction of the White moderates in Birmingham in his famous "Letter from a Birmingham Jail", the White moderates, like Noble, in Anniston stepped up and were able to bring progress with relative peace (there still were many acts of violence and people killed) even in the face of strong segregationist opposition. This is a story not often heard in the days of the Civil Rights South and so is worth exploring.
5 reviews
October 23, 2015
A window into history

If you do not remember the civil rights movement years, read this account of a small slice of it in one southern town through the eyes of one Presbyterian minister. I am proud to know Dr. Noble.
Profile Image for Jeff Vaughan.
46 reviews1 follower
April 2, 2016
Great story of the people of Anniston, AL, and their handling of integration issues during the civil rights movement. The author, a white presbyterian pastor in 1960s Anniston, makes the decision to do the right thing simply because it is the right thing
9 reviews
July 27, 2009
My grandfather, Miller Sproull, was one of people in this book. I had heard his stories of the events, and it was so interesting to be able to read about them.
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