mage Equality Forum Mourns
Civil Rights Pioneer Mildred Loving
In
1958, Mildred Jeter, a black woman legally married Richard Loving, a
white man in the District of Columbia. They returned to their home in
Virginia. Under a Virginia law enacted in 1662, blacks and whites were
prohibited from marrying. In 1967, in the case of Loving v. Virginia,
the U.S. Supreme Court struck down miscegenation laws that prohibited
blacks and whites from marrying as a violation of the U.S.
Constitution’s equal protection clause.
“Equality Forum mourns
Mildred Loving. She is a civil rights pioneer and a historic American.
Richard and Mildred Loving championed the right of each citizen to
marry the life partner of their choice.” stated Malcolm Lazin,
Executive Director of Equality Forum. In 2007, on the 40th anniversary
of Loving v. Virginia, Mildred Loving issued a statement urging that
gay men and lesbians be allowed to marry.
Image In 1958, the
county sheriff and two deputies broke into the bedroom of newlyweds
Mildred and Richard Loving. They were arrested for violating Virginia’s
Racial Integrity Act. Their prison term was suspended on the condition
that they not live in Virginia and that they not return at the same
time to Virginia for 25 years.
There were 38 states in the 20th
century that had miscegenation laws. In 1948, the California Supreme
Court was the first state to judicially overturn a miscegenation law.
Previous judicial attempts to overturn miscegenation laws were
unsuccessful. In 1967, when Loving v. Virginia was decided there were
16 states that had miscegenation laws.
Under miscegenation laws,
children from interracial marriages were considered illegitimate and
spouses and heirs could not receive inheritance rights or death
benefits.
When the Lovings challenged the miscegenation law,
Virginia Judge Leon Bazile upheld the Racial Integrity Act by stating
that if God meant for whites and blacks to mix, he would not have
placed them on different continents, and by Judge Bazile branding the
Lovings as felons. Acting on the advice of then-Attorney General Robert
Kennedy the Lovings sought the assistance of the American Civil
Liberties Union. The ACLU took the case from an unsuccessful result in
the Virginia Supreme Court to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Equality
Forum is a national and international GLBT civil rights organization
with an educational focus. Equality Forum undertakes high impact
initiatives, coordinates GLBT History Month, produces documentary films
and presents the largest annual national and international GLBT civil
rights forum.
2 comments on There are heroines everywhere!!
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hi,
HOW ABOUT Ruth and Ester they are heroies for Israel.
kkingdstyle
I really wish you would stop commenting on my blogs--you read what you want to read not what the blog is about--for instance in my last blog it was about the WORD homosexual which is not in the bible--and no where did I say Mildred is the only heroine in history.
You have your agenda but since I am not interested in it please refrain from commenting on my blogs--thank you.