On
Sept. 18,1959, eight black students walked onto a white college campus when
racial tension was seething and forever became known as the “Memphis State
Eight.”
Three
of the members have died – two recently: Eleanor Gandy, 76, on Feb. 6 in
Charlotte, North Carolina; and Rose Blakney-Love, 75, on Feb. 12 in Memphis. Sammie
Burnett Johnson, 71, was the first to die in 2011.
Five
of the eight members remain: Luther McClellan, Marvis Kneeland Jones, Ralph
Prater, John Simpson and Bertha Rogers Looney.
Their
courage and determination to integrate the former Memphis State University during
the burgeoning civil rights movement may have gone unnoticed if Markhum “Mark”
L. Stansbury Sr. had not recognized their historical significance as
trailblazers.
“We need to recognize the
Memphis State Eight,” Stansbury urged Dr. Shirley Raines when
she served as president of the current University of Memphis where he worked as
her special assistant.
A photojournalist and trailblazer himself,
Stansbury did not want the actions the group took in 1959 to become just a
footnote in history or, worse, languish in obscurity. He knew their actions
were just that important for posterity.
Raines was convinced the eight trailblazers
deserved the recognition and their rightful place in the annals of history. She
welcomed them back on campus in 2006 to a rousing reception and ceremony in
their honor.
The group’s exploits would catch the attention of
the media from time to time and eventually lead to the presentation of a
historical marker in front of the Administration Building.
“My life was made richer by knowing them and admiring
their courage,” Raines wrote in an email. “It was my distinct honor to have the
historical marker honoring them placed on the University of Memphis campus.”
Stansbury admires the eight trailblazers’ courage as
well for defying the University’s racist admissions policy and their disdain
for black students at that time. He once tried to enroll, but was denied. He
would serve four different presidents nearly 20 years.
Dr. Miriam DeCosta-Willis, who tried to enroll in
the university’s graduate program two years before the group’s decision to
challenge the all-white faculty and student body, was not accepted either.
An activist, scholar, author and retired
university professor, DeCosta-Willis said Gandy, Blakney-Love and Johnson are a passing generation
of civil rights fighters. She was shaken by the recent deaths of Gandy and Blakney-Love.
“I mourn the loss of those two valiant
individuals,” said DeCosta-Willis. “Now three of the eight are gone. It’s very
troubling.”
She was saddened too “when I read that two very courageous
fighters were down. I hope people will understand their courage and fortitude.
What they went through was abominable.”
They were vilified, harassed and ostracized even
after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 1954 that separate education was
“inherently unequal.” Still, torment and loneliness would follow the eight
students on campus each day they were subjected to the harsh reality of racism.
In spite of all the hoopla surrounding their
contentious enrollment, the eight students kept their eyes on the prize: a
college degree – whether it was conferred by the university or obtained at other
colleges where some of the members opted to attend.
Equating the courage and moxie of the Memphis
State 8 with Maxine Smith, Vasco Smith and Benjamin L. Hooks, DeCosta-Willis
said Gandy, Blakney-Love and Johnson were
treasures.
“I hope young people understand the sacrifice they
made,” she said. “Sometimes we take for granted what they were able to
accomplish.”
Gandy would go on to graduate from the University
in 1963. In 1996, she earned a master’s degree in education from Mississippi
State University. After graduation, she taught French in Memphis City Schools
for more than 20 years.
Two years after integrating the University, Blakney-Love left to get married and went to work for the
Tennessee Board of Parole.
“We extend our
sympathies to the families of Eleanor Gandy and Rose Blakney-Love,” said U of M
president David Rudd in a released statement. “As we continue to grow as a
University, we hope the courage and strength shown by these two groundbreaking
students will inspire future generations to stand up for what they believe in,
and to fight for social justice.”
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