Letter to President Dwight D. Eisenhower from Ira L. Aldridge In Favor of School Integration
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28-4
REVEILLE CLUB OF NEW YORK
MULTA
all
IRA L. ALDRIDGE
12/7/51
SECRETARY
egg
1947 SEVENTH AVENUE
NEW YORK 26, N.Y.
November 1, 1957
The Honorable Dwight D. Eisenhower
President of the Untied States
The White House
Washington, D. C.
My dear Mr. President:
We take pride in the technique employed in disposing of the
crisis which was "Little Rock", and hold in high esteem your courage
and forthrightness in this situation. When history is written this
incident will be one of the milestones in the evolution of the true
democracy, the ideal social state, which gives to all peoples equality
in opportunity, education, suffrage and employment. The day has gone
when mob rule has a place in these United States. There can be no
compromise with this, especially when it challenges the law of the
land, as handed down by the Supreme Tribunal of nine of our wisest men.
Your sending of Federal Troops to Little Rock for all the world
to see was the only answer to the Faubus challenge. Africa, Asia,
Western Europe, and the Soviet, along with the rest of the civilized
world, watched to see what you would do, and they saw, and in seeing,
had to change their opinions about many things. If we, as Americans,
are to have friends and allies, we must find them in their greatest
numbers, in Asia and in Africa. With the exception of Western Europe
and Latin America, these are the only people left in the world who
have not yet become a part of the Soviet domain. If we are to survive
we can no longer please only ourselves, much less a small and vicious
minority in our own land, but we must legislate, dictate, and manage
our internal affairs in such a manner as to make our policies ethically
acceptable to those whom we now need as friends.
Governor Faubus has unknowingly created an awareness in the watching
world by bringing this horrendous affair into the open to be seen by a
larger audience than ever before. In spite of the fact that Little Rock
is not a part of the "Deep South", these attitudes may now be more
readily comprehended. The provincialisms, the hates, the prejudices, and
the corrupt politics now stand before the bar of universal public opinion,
and, like an ulcer, have been exposed, to be analyzed and diagnosed
clearly and carefully and the remedy applied for efficient cauterization.
We salute you and Mr. Brownell for the methods and treatment which
were employed to resolve the Little Rock "incident".
Respectfully submitted,
Sah. Gedudge
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