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Anne Braden’s memoir of the case, “The Wall Between” was published in 1958, becoming one of the few accounts of its era to probe the psychology of white southern racism from within.
Anne Braden: Southern Patriot screens Wednesday, July 18, 7pm, at the Alamo Drafthouse South Lamar. A Q&A with co-director and editor Anne Lewis follows the screening.
Anne Braden was a civil rights activist who was accused of being a communist and seditionist by southern politicians. She later became a role model to protesters launching sit-ins and successful ...
Anne Braden, a social activist who was indicted on charges of sedition after helping a black couple integrate a white neighborhood in Louisville in the 1950s, died Monday. She was 81. Ms. Braden ha… ...
Her white attackers called Anne Braden a race traitor. A middle-class white woman from Alabama, Braden rejected her racial privilege in the Jim Crow South and devoted her life to fighting racism ...
Anne Braden, a longtime social activist who was indicted on charges of sedition after helping a black couple integrate a 1950s white neighborhood in Louisville, Ky., died Monday. She was 81.
Anne Braden is a Louisville legend who devoted her life to the fight for social justice. Now part of her story is being brought to life using puppets.
The Braden Family purchased a home for Andrew, a Korean War veteran, and his family in Shively in 1954. The Wades were the first Black family in Shively.
Carl Braden, left, was accompanied by his wife, Anne, after his release from prison in La Grange on July 2, 1955. He served seven months after being convicted of advocating sedition.
Anne Braden, a civil rights activist best known for her attempt at dismantling segregation by purchasing a home for a black family in an all-white Kentucky neighborhood in the 1950s, died Monday ...