Remember Henry Harris: Lost Icon of a Revolution: A Story of Hope and Self-Sacrifice in America

After the freedom rides ended, after the bus boycotts and sit-ins, the marches and protests, and long after the TV cameras and federal marshals packed up and went home, Henry Harris enrolled at Auburn University, alone in a dormitory of one hundred and fifty white southern males high on testosterone. Harris was the first African American on athletic scholarship at Auburn and, more importantly, the first black athlete at any SEC school in the Deep South. An exceptional basketball player, he was valedictorian of all-black Greene County Training School in Boligee, Alabama. It was 1968 and the spring Martin Luther King was murdered—only two weeks after speaking at a rally in Greene County. It was an extraordinary time, and Harris decided to make his life matter by going to Auburn. He was the seeming quintessential candidate for integration, but nothing could have prepared him for the next four years. Fourteen years after Brown v. Board Education, he still had not satin a classroom with a white person. Sam Heys's curiosity about Harris's life deepened the night in 1974 that he ripped an article from a newswire printer and read four paragraphs reporting Harris's suicide at twenty-four. The details were scarce, and the story was missing all the "whys." Heys fills in the facts, answers the questions, and traces Harris's extraordinary passage from an abandoned store in tiny Boligee, Alabama, to a rooftop in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, a journey that helped revolutionize the South and America.

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Remember Henry Harris: Lost Icon of a Revolution: A Story of Hope and Self-Sacrifice in America

After the freedom rides ended, after the bus boycotts and sit-ins, the marches and protests, and long after the TV cameras and federal marshals packed up and went home, Henry Harris enrolled at Auburn University, alone in a dormitory of one hundred and fifty white southern males high on testosterone. Harris was the first African American on athletic scholarship at Auburn and, more importantly, the first black athlete at any SEC school in the Deep South. An exceptional basketball player, he was valedictorian of all-black Greene County Training School in Boligee, Alabama. It was 1968 and the spring Martin Luther King was murdered—only two weeks after speaking at a rally in Greene County. It was an extraordinary time, and Harris decided to make his life matter by going to Auburn. He was the seeming quintessential candidate for integration, but nothing could have prepared him for the next four years. Fourteen years after Brown v. Board Education, he still had not satin a classroom with a white person. Sam Heys's curiosity about Harris's life deepened the night in 1974 that he ripped an article from a newswire printer and read four paragraphs reporting Harris's suicide at twenty-four. The details were scarce, and the story was missing all the "whys." Heys fills in the facts, answers the questions, and traces Harris's extraordinary passage from an abandoned store in tiny Boligee, Alabama, to a rooftop in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, a journey that helped revolutionize the South and America.

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Remember Henry Harris: Lost Icon of a Revolution: A Story of Hope and Self-Sacrifice in America

Remember Henry Harris: Lost Icon of a Revolution: A Story of Hope and Self-Sacrifice in America

by Sam Heys
Remember Henry Harris: Lost Icon of a Revolution: A Story of Hope and Self-Sacrifice in America

Remember Henry Harris: Lost Icon of a Revolution: A Story of Hope and Self-Sacrifice in America

by Sam Heys

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Overview

After the freedom rides ended, after the bus boycotts and sit-ins, the marches and protests, and long after the TV cameras and federal marshals packed up and went home, Henry Harris enrolled at Auburn University, alone in a dormitory of one hundred and fifty white southern males high on testosterone. Harris was the first African American on athletic scholarship at Auburn and, more importantly, the first black athlete at any SEC school in the Deep South. An exceptional basketball player, he was valedictorian of all-black Greene County Training School in Boligee, Alabama. It was 1968 and the spring Martin Luther King was murdered—only two weeks after speaking at a rally in Greene County. It was an extraordinary time, and Harris decided to make his life matter by going to Auburn. He was the seeming quintessential candidate for integration, but nothing could have prepared him for the next four years. Fourteen years after Brown v. Board Education, he still had not satin a classroom with a white person. Sam Heys's curiosity about Harris's life deepened the night in 1974 that he ripped an article from a newswire printer and read four paragraphs reporting Harris's suicide at twenty-four. The details were scarce, and the story was missing all the "whys." Heys fills in the facts, answers the questions, and traces Harris's extraordinary passage from an abandoned store in tiny Boligee, Alabama, to a rooftop in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, a journey that helped revolutionize the South and America.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940163969722
Publisher: Black Belt Books
Publication date: 09/10/2019
Sold by: Draft2Digital
Format: eBook
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Sam Heys first saw Henry Harris play basketball 1969. Both young men were still teenagers, but Heys sensed then he was sitting in on history, that he was watching a change agent at work. Heys's curiosity about Harris's life deepened five years later on the night he ripped an article from a newswire printer and read four paragraphs reporting Harris's suicide at twenty-four. But the details were vague and the story was hardly, missing all the "whys." Heys fills in the facts, answers the questions, and traces Harris's extraordinary passage from an abandoned store in tiny Boligee, Alabama, to a rooftop in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, a journey that helped revolutionize the South and America.
An award-winning author and journalist who uses a commanding, concise writing style to capture time and place, Heys witnessed the integration of the Southeastern Conference up close as a sports writer for the Atlanta Constitution and Columbus Enquirer in the 1970s. During his four months of research in 1980 for a multi-part series on the integration of southern collegiate sports, he interviewed most of the racial pioneers at SEC and Atlantic Coast Conference member schools.
Heys is author or co-author three nonfiction books, including the acclaimed The Winecoff Fire: The Untold Story of America's Deadliest Hotel Fire, published by Longstreet Press. Investigative reporting by Heys and Allen Goodwin found that the 1946 Winecoff Hotel fire in Atlanta was arson, and their book tells the stories of the 119 lives that were its victims. Heys and co-author Dub Taft took second place in history in the Georgia Author of the Year Awards, sponsored by the Georgia Writers Association for their 2011, book Big Bets: Decisions and Leaders That Shaped Southern Company.
Heys' article on a state champion basketball team from Kentucky's hardscrabble Clay County-"Hills of Coal, Feats of Clay"-was named the best sports feature story written in U.S. newspapers in 1988 and chosen as the lead story in that year's Best Sports Stories anthology The judges' comments began: "The best journalism always has been that which helps us understand the human condition. The best sports writers have always known that. . . ."
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