Excerpt from the Testimony of
Historian Dr. John Hope Franklin

From the Transcript of
Grutter V. Bollinger, 
The University of Michigan
Affirmative Action Trial
January 24, 2001

Dr. John Hope Franklin
January 2, 1915 – March 25, 2009
        


                          GRUTTER -vs- BOLLINGER, ET AL

         9                    [...] So, I went to college without ever 

        10         having had a modern foreign language.  And I had to

        11         take--and I knew that by the time I was a sophomore

        12         in college and I was going to major in history.

        13                        And my major professor who was a

        14         young white man, the chairman of the History

        15         Department at Fisk University which was all black,

        16         of course, it had a mix, it was white and black

        17         faculty.

        18                        He almost immediately decided that he

        19         wanted me to go to Harvard.  And we sort of--as an

        20         undergraduate I was doing everything that he wanted

        21         me to do to be certain that I was eligible to go to

        22         Harvard, including the Harvard requirement of two

        23         modern foreign languages in order to qualify with

        24         any advanced degree.

        25                        So, there I was as a sophomore and





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         1         junior at Fisk University taking elementary courses

         2         in French and German, so that I could be eligible to

         3         qualify at Harvard.

         4                        And I took them and I did qualify at

         5         Harvard in both languages, and was prepared in a

         6         very careful way by him to be able to do the work at

         7         Harvard.

         8                        When I went to Harvard, I had no

         9         problem.  As a matter of fact it was, if I can say

        10         so, it was a push over if that, because of his

        11         careful preparation.  It was no other explanation

        12         for it.

        13   Q.    Were there many Fisk students at that point who

        14         ended up at the Harvard graduate school?

        15   A.    No, there were not many Fisk students at Harvard

        16         graduate school.  Indeed, there were almost no

        17         students, other than white students at Harvard.  I

        18         had no black students, fellow students in any of my

        19         classes at Harvard.

        20                        There were a few at the university,

        21         maybe one in English and two in law school and two

        22         in the Biology Department, and maybe one or two

        23         more.  Two or three other graduates.

        24                        I would say that there might have

        25         been as many as--this is a liberal figure, as many





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         1         as a dozen students that were African Americans at

         2         Harvard in 1936 when I went there.  In 1935 when I

         3         went there.

         4   Q.    Of thousands?

         5   A.    What's that?

         6   Q.    Of thousands?

         7   A.    Yes, there were 10,000 or more students at Harvard.

         8         And I went to Harvard, of course, it was the pit of

         9         the Depression.  My father had to become what we

        10         describe generously as became bankrupt.  We lost our

        11         home simply because of the extraordinary bite of the

        12         Depression.  The poverty was unspeakable.

        13                        So, that I went to Harvard, I could

        14         not have gone to the University of Oklahoma as you

        15         certainly know.  And the University of Oklahoma not

        16         only did not admit any blacks, no blacks could be in

        17         the town after dark.

        18                        And they gave me a scholarship, out

        19         of state scholarship it was called, and that was for

        20         a hundred dollars if, if I passed my courses.  That

        21         is, I did not have the freedom to fail as they did

        22         at normal Oklahoma.  You were admitted and then you

        23         might or you might not pass.

        24                        But I didn't have that privilege, I

        25         had to pass in order to get that hundred dollars
                          GRUTTER -vs- BOLLINGER, ET AL
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         1         from the state of Oklahoma against--paid toward my

         2         tuition.  And that remained the practice down to the

         3         time that they admitted blacks to Oklahoma in the

         4         1950s.

         5                        Now, the matter of trying to do the

         6         kind of work that I undertook to do in graduate

         7         school and after, it would project my life work.

         8         Brought me into contact with the kind of life that I

         9         hadn't imagined.

        10                        When I took my general examinations

        11         at Harvard in the spring of 1939, I decided to do a

        12         dissertation on North Carolina.  So, I went to

        13         North Carolina and there I went in to see the

        14         director of the state archives.

        15                        And I told him I wanted to do

        16         research on free negroes in North Carolina from 1798

        17         to 60.  And he said, well, I suppose I will have to

        18         do something about that.  He said, I see no reason

        19         why you wouldn't be able to work here, he said, but

        20         when we built this building we didn't anticipate

        21         that anyone of your color would work here.  And so

        22         we don't have any place for you to work.

        23                        He said, but if you will give me a

        24         week I'll try to arrange something.  And I remained

        25         silent and I looked at him and I had my mental





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         1         adding machine, I was going to have to pay the rent,

         2         board, room and all of that for a week while I

         3         twiddled my thumbs.

         4                        And I just looked at him and he said,

         5         well, what about a half week.  I said, I'll be back

         6         Thursday, this was Monday.  I went back Thursday and

         7         they prepared a place for me.

         8                        They cleared out one of the exhibit

         9         rooms, the smallest exhibit room there was for the

        10         archives or display of archives of materials.  And

        11         they put a desk and a chair and a waste basket in

        12         there.

        13                        And he gave me a key, he said, I'll

        14         give you a key to the stacks because I don't think

        15         we can request the white pages to deliver materials

        16         to you.  So you'll have to get your materials

        17         yourself.

        18                        I said, all right.  He gave me his

        19         key.  He said, you go through the search room that's

        20         where all the whites were sitting and doing their

        21         research.  You go through the search room to the

        22         stacks, and you get what you want and bring it over

        23         to your room and you can work there.

        24                        And I did that and it turned out to

        25         be the most satisfactory arrangement, because I





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         1         could sort of window shop in the stacks, pull down

         2         what I wanted, things that I thought I might want.

         3                        And I would come through the main

         4         reading room with my dolly and my library card,

         5         laden with materials.  And the white researchers

         6         looked at me with some disdain as well as jealousy.

         7                        And two weeks later the director of

         8         the archives told me and said, I have to take your

         9         key.  And I searched my conduct and wondered what I

        10         had done that was offensive.

        11                        I said what's the matter, he said

        12         well, the white searchers who see you coming through

        13         the room with all of your materials which you have

        14         selected yourself, says that this is a

        15         discrimination against them and they want keys

        16         themselves.

        17                        He said, well, I can't give everyone

        18         keys and I therefore will have to take your key.

        19         And you will have to abide by the regular rules

        20         which, of course, would involve your bringing one

        21         request in, depositing it, then going back to your

        22         room and waiting for that to be delivered to you.

        23                        And I said, well, if that's what you

        24         think it should be, all right.  Now, it was at that

        25         point that I realized the inconsistency and the





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         1         remarkable ingenuity, if I may put it, of racial

         2         discrimination of those who practiced it.

         3                        I had to work in three libraries.

         4         And within a radius of three blocks of each other,

         5         literally within three blocks of each other.  One of

         6         them was the archives where I described that I had

         7         used a separate room.

         8                        The other was the state library on

         9         the other side of the square.  And there I could go

        10         into the main reading room and work, but there was a

        11         regular place in the stacks for African Americans to

        12         sit.

        13                        And we were not supposed to go take

        14         the books off the shelf or take the newspapers in

        15         there.  But actually we were to make that request,

        16         but we could sit there in the stacks and use the

        17         materials.

        18                        Then on the other side of the square

        19         was the Supreme Court library.  And there were no

        20         restrictions at all.  We sat and did our work at the

        21         same table that white people were sitting.

        22                        I said this is rather strange.  In

        23         the radius of two or three blocks, we had three

        24         practices, three practices of racial distinction or

        25         discrimination or segregation.





                          GRUTTER -vs- BOLLINGER, ET AL
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         1                        And that gave me to understand that

         2         the practice of racial segregation was sort of

         3         improvisational.  That is they made it up as they

         4         went along.

         5                        They have did this on one side of the

         6         block, they did another on the other side of the

         7         block, and another on the other side of the block.

         8         Whatever seemed to pass their minds, as long as

         9         there was distinction.

        10                        As long as there was a mark of, as

        11         old people say, a mark of distinction, a mark of

        12         oppression of some kind.  The differentiation was

        13         there.

        14                        Or another way, not only was this

        15         practice at the highest levels, what I think of

        16         libraries would be fairly high.  It was practiced at

        17         the other extreme, that I couldn't say which was

        18         more praiseworthy or meritorious.

        19                        Outside the city, just outside the

        20         city there were two barbecue joints or places where

        21         you could go.  I didn't go, but some other people

        22         did.  I went once and that was enough for me.  I

        23         didn't have to have a barbecue, I had to have those

        24         papers and things like that in the libraries.  But I

        25         didn't have to have a barbecue.





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         1                        But this struck me as rather

         2         remarkable, and it was not unlike what they were

         3         doing downtown in the capital square.  You go out to

         4         one of these places, barbecue places.

         5                        One if you went in to one of them and

         6         you wanted to be served, you sat in your car and

         7         young white girls would come out and bring anything

         8         you wanted, serve you with great applaud.

         9                        Across the road was another, and you

        10         could go and sit in your car all day and they would

        11         look out there, and you would be in your car and

        12         they wouldn't come out.

        13                        But you go in the place and you were

        14         welcomed heartedly, warmly.  I said, what's going on

        15         here?  On the one side they say we don't serve

        16         blacks in cars.  On the other side they say we do.

        17                        On the one side they say you're

        18         welcome to come in and eat.  On the other side they

        19         said you can't even come in the door.  You need a

        20         road map, or you need an encyclopedia and a number

        21         of other aides to help you navigate your way through

        22         these racial minds as it were.

        23                        And that gave me to understand that

        24         race distinctions were not very significant, except

        25         to make a difference to.  And it must have done





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         1         something to the people, it must have given them

         2         some sense of superiority, or it must have given

         3         them a sense of satisfaction if they could be a few

         4         notches above or away from others.

         5                        And I decided that that was a kind of

         6         a sickness, a kind of searching for something that

         7         would give them a sense of security and superiority

         8         and advantage.

         9                        And that to me--see, I found it in

        10         other ways too.  I've described what doing research

        11         at North Carolina meant.  If doing research in North

        12         Carolina was that bad, when I went to Alabama to do

        13         research with the confederate flag flying over the

        14         Archives Building, I didn't know whether I even

        15         wanted to attempt to do research there.

        16                        And the first morning I went in to do

        17         research, I told the woman in the search room that I

        18         wanted these materials, and she said, yes, I will

        19         get them for you.  And she brought them and handed

        20         them to me.

        21                        And I waited for her to tell me what

        22         to do with these materials, with this background of

        23         having waited three days for someone to arrange a

        24         room in North Carolina, I thought that I might have

        25         to wait a week in Alabama or a month.





                          GRUTTER -vs- BOLLINGER, ET AL
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         1                        And she gave me the materials and she

         2         stood there and looked at me.  And I stood there in

         3         a quandary, I didn't know what to do with them, I

         4         didn't know where to go, where to sit.

         5                        I'm in the reading room, but I assume

         6         that that reading room was where I could not sit.

         7         But since she had not indicated to me that there was

         8         a room separate for me in the basement or somewhere

         9         else, I then did what I would do in Detroit at a

        10         library, I went to look for a quiet corner.

        11                        And so I went toward that corner, she

        12         said you can't sit there.  I was like, why don't you

        13         tell me where to sit, I said to myself.  I said,

        14         well, where should I sit, she said, you sit over

        15         here with the others.  She said that's the coolest

        16         part of the room where they're sitting, and they

        17         need to meet you anyway.

        18                        And so she said, you sits there.

        19         Then she made all of them stop doing what they were

        20         doing, and she introduced them to me.  And she said,

        21         now you sit there with the others, so I did.

        22                        But this is all confusing, you see.

        23         You can't be certain what to do, you see.  That's

        24         what I meant by improvisation, you don't know, you

        25         don't know where you stand.  And I work there off





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         1         and on for weeks.

         2                        And at one point I wanted to look at

         3         a set of papers, Governor Winston papers.  And I

         4         said to the person in the search room, I want to see

         5         the Winston papers, they said we can't show them to

         6         you, they're in preparation.

         7                        The only way you can see them is to

         8         get permission from the director of the archives.

         9         Who at that time was Ms. Marie Bankhead-Owens.  And

        10         I said, well, when does she come in.  They said,

        11         well, she comes in, she will be in Thursday

        12         afternoon.  This is Wednesday morning.

        13                        She will be in Thursday afternoon.  I

        14         said, well, how will I know that she is here.  She

        15         says, well, you will know.  Everyone knows when

        16         Ms. Owens arrives.

        17                        So I waited.  And the next afternoon,

        18         indeed, the whole building took on a different

        19         atmosphere.  I said Ms. Owens must be here.

        20                        And I went up to her office and I

        21         told her secretary, I want to have a word with

        22         Ms. Owens.  And she said, well, she's in there, go

        23         in.

        24                        And I went in, and as I went in I got

        25         another lesson.  The secretary did not close the





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         1         door behind me, and when I got in to speak to

         2         Ms. Owens she did not ask me to sit down.  I said

         3         this is another mine field I'm in.

         4                        And she said, what can I do for you,

         5         I told her I wanted to see Governor Winston's

         6         papers.  And she said certainly you can see the

         7         Winston papers and anything else that you want.

         8         You're free to see them, just let me know and I'll

         9         be glad to facilitate your efforts.

        10                        I said, well, I do appreciate that

        11         very much, I'm still standing.  And she said, they

        12         tell me that there's a Harvard nigger in the

        13         building, have you seen him.

        14                        And the secretary whose door was open

        15         and she was listening to the conversation, she said,

        16         that's him, Ms. Owens, that's him.  She said, are

        17         you the Harvard nigger?

        18                        She said, I had no idea.  She said,

        19         you got right nice manners, why don't you sit down.

        20         My first invitation to have a seat.

        21                        She said, where were you born and

        22         raised, I said Oklahoma.  She said, no, no, that's

        23         not where you got those nice manners.  I wanted to

        24         tell her that my mother taught me, I was discreet

        25         enough to let her explore the matter.





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         1                        She said, where did you go to school,

         2         I said, Rentiesville, Oklahoma, Tulsa, Oklahoma.

         3         She said, no, no, I don't mean that.  Where did you

         4         go to school out of the state.  And I said I went to

         5         school at Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee.

         6                        She said that's it, that's where you

         7         learned those manners.  Nice good old confederate

         8         state.  And I let that pass.  And she then went on

         9         to tell me about the south and about manners and so

        10         forth.

        11                        And she didn't undertake to tell me

        12         why she treated me like that, except that when she

        13         told me of an incident where she had a relationship

        14         with a black woman, wife of the president of

        15         Tuskegee.

        16                        She said, I called her Ms. Moten.

        17         She said, but I wouldn't call you--it would be

        18         beyond the realm of possibility for me to refer to

        19         you as mister, do you understand that?  I'm not

        20         going to ever call you mister, I don't call black

        21         men mister.

        22                        I'll call you doctor, reverend,

        23         professor, whatever comes to mind, except for

        24         mister.  You don't deserve that much respect.  I

        25         said, well, as you will.





                          GRUTTER -vs- BOLLINGER, ET AL
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         1                        And the problem with her after that

         2         was that she wanted to talk so much that she took up

         3         so much of my time and I was busy.  And she wanted

         4         to talk to me about the race thing.

         5                        And I began then to think about what

         6         race really meant to her and to people like her.

         7         And I could not escape the conclusion that the only

         8         thing that race meant to her was, well, the only

         9         thing that race meant to these other people that I

        10         talked about.

        11                        Is that they wanted to be certain

        12         that there was maintained a distant, not laterally

        13         but vertically.  A distance where they were

        14         somewhere above a cut above, that's very essential,

        15         very, very essential.

        16                        And whether it's in a library or

        17         whether it's in a hotel or rather it's in school or

        18         wherever, this distance, this vertical distance must

        19         be maintained this superior position.  The position

        20         of advantage must be maintained.

        21                        And I came to the conclusion that the

        22         maintenance of this was so important that they

        23         didn't mind being inconsistent.  They didn't mind

        24         being improvisational, as long as that gave them

        25         this vertical advantage where they were somewhere





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         1         above and somewhere beyond.

         2                        And that to me was a revelation just

         3         to come to that conclusion and to reach the view

         4         that these people were groping for a way to live and

         5         to co-exist with other people.

         6                        And the only way they could do it

         7         comfortably was to have this distance.  To have this

         8         sense of self importance and of superiority, if you

         9         will.

        10                        And I have always had difficulty in

        11         squaring that with the so-called American way of

        12         living, practicing, doing things.  And not only was

        13         this improvisation was inconsistent and incongruous

        14         too, with what we are taught to be the American way

        15         of the practice of equality on the one hand, and

        16         human relations on the other as well.

                                  GRUTTER -vs- BOLLINGER, ET AL
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