TY - BOOK AU - Guzmán,Will TI - Civil Rights in the Texas Borderlands: Dr. Lawrence A. Nixon and Black Activism AV - E185 .C585 2015 PY - 2015/// CY - Urbana PB - University of Illinois Press KW - Nixon, Lawrence A., KW - African Americans KW - Texas KW - El Paso KW - Biography KW - Civil rights KW - History KW - Segregation KW - Suffrage KW - Electronic Books N1 - 2; Lawrence A. Nixon chronology --; Introduction : tale of a doctor, history of a land --; Marshall, Texas, 1883-1909 --; The lure of El Paso, 1910-1919 --; Bullets and ropes: wading in bloody waters, 1919-1924 --; Nixon, the NAACP, and the courts, 1924-1934 --; Optimism and rejection, 1925-1962 --; Coda; 2; b N2 - In 1907, physician Lawrence A. Nixon fled the racial violence of central Texas to settle in the border town of El Paso. There he became a community and civil rights leader. His victories in two Supreme Court decisions paved the way for dismantling all-white political primaries across the South. Will Guzmán delves into Nixon's lifelong struggle against Jim Crow. Linking Nixon's activism to his independence from the white economy, support from the NAACP, and the man's own indefatigable courage, Guzmán also sheds light on Nixon's presence in symbolic and literal borderlands--as an educated professional in a time when few went to college, as an African American who made waves when most feared violent reprisal, and as someone living on the mythical American frontier as well as an international boundary. A powerful addition to the literature on African Americans in the Southwest, Civil Rights in the Texas Borderlands explores seldom-studied corners of the Black past and the civil rights movement UR - https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&db=nlabk&AN=992532&site=eds-live&custid=s3260518 ER -