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pnwmom

(109,630 posts)
Fri Mar 15, 2019, 09:10 PM Mar 2019

"I won't respond," the young black woman told the judge, "until you call me Miss Hamilton."

https://www.npr.org/sections/codeswitch/2017/11/30/567177501/when-miss-meant-so-much-more-how-one-woman-fought-alabama-and-won?fbclid=IwAR2QBU0mJ7fmtq4nuVZxLiR2n8AuzYTO2gEEMooPyKp9WAXNgA0Z5Gu-36E

June 1963. Gadsden, Ala. Mary Hamilton, 28, stood in a courtroom before a judge.

She was a black civil rights activist, arrested for nonviolent protest. And the judge was losing his patience.

The atmosphere in Gadsden that summer "was truly frightening and terrifying," says Colin Morris, a history professor at Manhattanville College. "The Klan was highly active. On more than one occasion there had been attacks in Gadsden."

But Hamilton wasn't frightened. She was furious. She refused to answer the prosecutor's questions.

"I won't respond," she said, "until you call me Miss Hamilton."

SNIP

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"I won't respond," the young black woman told the judge, "until you call me Miss Hamilton." (Original Post) pnwmom Mar 2019 OP
Brava, Miss Mary Hamilton. sheshe2 Mar 2019 #1
Language does count. Delmette2.0 Mar 2019 #2

Delmette2.0

(4,272 posts)
2. Language does count.
Sat Mar 16, 2019, 02:05 PM
Mar 2019

We have forgotten the people who were so very brave.



I was also reminded of Dipshit who only calls her Nancy, not Madam Speaker.

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