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Book, Until Justice Rolls Down cover

Until Justice Rolls Down
The Birmingham Church Bombing Case

Sikora, Frank
Paperback
$13.00 + $1.99 USPS S/H
$0.65 of your order (5%) will be donated to the school of your choice.

BOOK SYNOPSIS

It was a time when Martin Luther King Jr. and other leaders rallied black youth and adults to march for their civil rights, a time when the Ku Klux Klan was active in cities and throughout the countryside of the Deep South, employing 19th-century tactics to intimidate blacks to stay “in their place.” It was also the year that the worst act of terrorism in the entire civil rights movement occurred just as Birmingham, Alabama, was coming under close national scrutiny.

This book tells the story of one grim Sunday in September 1963 when an intentionally planted cache of dynamite ripped through the walls of the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church and ended the dreams and the lives of four young black girls. Their deaths spurred the Kennedy administration to send an army of FBI agents to Alabama and led directly to the passage of the Civil Rights Act. When the Justice Department was unable to bring anyone to trial for this heinous crime, a young Alabama attorney general named Bill Baxley began his own investigation to find the perpetrators. In 1977, 14 years after the bombing, Baxley brought one Klansman to trial and, in a courtroom only blocks from the bombed church (now a memorial to the victims), persuaded a jury to return a guilty verdict. More than 20 years later two other perpetrators were tried for the bombing, found guilty, and remanded to prison.

Frank Sikora has used the court records, FBI reports, oral interviews, and newspaper accounts to weave a story of spellbinding proportions. A reporter by profession, Sikora tells this story compellingly, explaining why the civil rights movement had to be successful and how Birmingham had to change.

Frank Sikora is a career journalist who retired recently from the Birmingham News. He is author of The Judge: The Life and Opinions of Alabama’s Frank M. Johnson, Jr., Let Us Now Praise Famous Women: A Memoir, and, with Sheyann Webb and Rachel West Nelson, Selma, Lord, Selma.

BOOK EXCERPTS
32

BOOK REVIEWS
Sikora tells a sad tale well. Until Justice Rolls Down details the frustration of the seemingly hopeless investigation. . . . Everyone interested in American history should buy this book.--Tom Wagy, Florida Historical Quarterly


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FOR RELATED BOOKS
History Books :: United States Books :: 20Th Century Books
Political Science Books :: Political Freedom & Security Books :: Civil Rights Books

MORE BOOK INFO
ISBN: 0817352686
Dewey Decimal: 364.152/3/09761781
Library of Congress: 2005008452
Book Publisher: Univ of Alabama Pr
Language: ENG
No. of Pages: 266



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