The Color of Work: The Struggle for Civil Rights in the Southern Paper Industry, 1945-1980

by Timothy J. Minchin

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Histories of the civil rights movement have generally overlooked the battle to integrate the South's major industries. The paper industry, which has played an important role in the southern economy since the 1930s, has been particularly neglected. Using previously untapped legal records and oral history interviews, Timothy Minchin provides the first in-depth account of the struggle to integrate southern paper mills.

Minchin describes how jobs in the southern paper industry were strictly segregated prior to the 1960s, with black workers confined to low-paying, menial positions. All work literally had a color: every job was racially designated and workers were represented by segregated local unions. Though black workers tried to protest workplace inequities through their unions, their efforts were largely ineffective until passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act opened the way for scores of antidiscrimination lawsuits. Even then, however, resistance from executives and white workers ensured that the fight to integrate the paper industry was a long and difficult one.
|Using legal records and oral history interviews, Timothy Minchin provides the first in-depth account of the struggle of black labor unions to remove restrictions on which jobs could be held by black employees in southern paper mills.
  • ISBN10 0807875481
  • ISBN13 9780807875483
  • Publish Date 14 January 2003 (first published 30 July 2001)
  • Publish Status Unknown
  • Out of Print 23 April 2014
  • Publish Country US
  • Imprint The University of North Carolina Press
  • Format eBook
  • Pages 293
  • Language English