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Not very many white people in U.S. history have worked for racial justice as tirelessly, as deeply, or as long as did Louisville journalist Anne Braden, who died here 10 years ago on March 6 ...
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 ...
It started 60 years ago when white activists, led by Carl and Anne Braden purchased a home on behalf of a young black family. As Rick Howlett of Here & Now contributing station WFPL reports ...
(LOUISVILLE, Ky.)-- Longtime civil-rights activist Anne Braden, who was accused of sedition and being a communist and who endured death threats and arrests, was remembered as an icon who fought for ...
Subscribe to The St. Louis American‘s free weekly newsletter for critical stories, community voices, and insights that matter. Sign up Anne Braden, a steadfast civil rights supporter and ...
Anne Braden, a writer, editor and organizer who has been active in civil rights, civil liberties, peace and labor organizations in the South for the past 50 years, will speak at Smith College at 4 p.m ...
in the Courier Journal along with a photo of the damaged home of Andrew Wade IV that would begin a landmark legal case involving Carl and Anne Braden. Several months earlier, the Bradens ...
She was an educated white Southerner well schooled in traditional ladyhood who saw her privilege as a prison. Anne Braden’s working-class husband, Carl, was, like her, a newspaper reporter in ...
March 6, 2006, 10:18 PM EST / Source: The Associated Press Anne Braden, a longtime civil rights activist best known for trying to dismantle segregation by purchasing a home for a black family in ...
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