What a Price for Peace

Boone ed 001.jpg

Title

What a Price for Peace

Subject

Editorials
Boone, Buford, 1909 - 1983

Description

"What a Price for Peace" was written by Buford Boone, editor and publisher of the Tuscaloosa News and advocate of law and order in a time when chaos reigned.

On February 7, 1956, after three days of student demonstrations, the University of Alabama suspended Autherine Lucy, the first African American to attempt integration in the history of the school. The next day Boone published his editorial in the Tuscaloosa News, condemning the mob violence that had taken place on campus and the university's response to it.

"What a Price for Peace" thrust Boone into the national spotlight and earned him the Pulitizer Prize for editorial writing in 1957. He became the South's moderate voice in the civil rights movement, a role that won him both enemies and supporters. (Alabama Heritage: Summer 2007)

Creator

Buford Boone

Source

Tuscaloosa News Archive

Publisher

Tuscaloosa News

Date

February 7, 1956

Contributor

Betty Slowe (Description)

Type

Document

Identifier

975

Coverage

Tuscaloosa (AL)

Original Format

Newspaper