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Transformed William G. McAtee

Transformed By William G. McAtee

Transformed by William G. McAtee


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Summary

Focusing on the quiet leadership of Mayor McLean and fellow ministers, Bill McAtee shows how these religious and political leaders enacted changes that began opening access to public institutions and facilities for all citizens, black and white.

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Transformed Summary

Transformed: A White Mississippi Pastor's Journey into Civil Rights and Beyond by William G. McAtee

In May 1964, Bill McAtee became the new minister at Columbia Presbyterian Church, deep in the Piney Woods of south Mississippi. Soon after his arrival, three young civil rights workers were brutally murdered outside Philadelphia, Mississippi. Many other activists from across the country poured into the state to try to bring an end to segregation and to register black citizens to vote. Already deeply troubled by the resistance of so many of his fellow white southerners to any change in the racial status quo, McAtee understood that he could no longer be a passive bystander. A fourth-generation Mississippian and son of a Presbyterian minister, he joined a group of local ministers--two white and four black--to assist the mayor of Columbia, Earl D. Buddy McLean, in building community bridges and navigating the roiling social and political waters.Focusing on the quiet leadership of Mayor McLean and fellow ministers, McAtee shows how these religious and political leaders enacted changes that began opening access to public institutions and facilities for all citizens, black and white. In retrospect, McAtee's involvement in these events during this intense period became a turning point in repudiating his past acquiescence to the injustices of the racist society of his birth. His personal account of this transformation underscores its meaning for him today and reminds the reader that no generation can ignore the past or rest comfortably on its progress toward tolerance, equality, and justice.

About William G. McAtee

William G. McAtee is a retired Presbyterian minister. In the late 1950s and 1960s, he served two pastorates in Mississippi--Amory and Columbia. For twenty-six years, he was an executive for Transylvania Presbytery in Lexington, Kentucky, retiring in 1997. He taught as an adjunct faculty member at Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary, McCormick Presbyterian Seminary, and Lexington Theological Seminary.



Additional information

CIN1617031151VG
9781617031151
1617031151
Transformed: A White Mississippi Pastor's Journey into Civil Rights and Beyond by William G. McAtee
Used - Very Good
Hardback
University Press of Mississippi
20110825
272
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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