Vivian Malone Jones – R.I.P

Ken AshfordHistory, RaceLeave a Comment

Vert_wallaceMalonejones_classroom1Classy lady.  A real looker, too.

Vivian Malone Jones, one of two black students whose effort to enroll at the University of Alabama led to George Wallace’s infamous "stand in the schoolhouse door" in 1963, died Thursday. She was 63.

Jones, who went on to become the first black to graduate from the school, died at Atlanta Medical Center, where she was admitted Tuesday after suffering a stroke, said her sister, Sharon Malone.

"She was absolutely fine Monday," Malone said.

Jones, a retired federal worker who lived in Atlanta, grew up in Mobile, Ala. She had enrolled at historically black Alabama A&M University in Huntsville when she transferred to the University of Alabama in 1963. The move led to then-Gov. Wallace’s infamous stand in defiance of orders to admit black students. Jones and James Hood, accompanied by then-Deputy U.S. Attorney General Nicholas Katzenbach, enrolled after Wallace finished his statement and left.

At an appearance last year in Mobile, she recalled that she and Hood waited in a car until Wallace read his proclamation. "I was never afraid. I did have some apprehensions in my mind, though, especially having gone to segregated, ‘separate, but equal’ schools."

Jones said her religious beliefs gave her confidence to persist. She graduated in 1965.

"God was with me," she said.