A Southern Integrationists Memoir
"Bill Dufford was born into South Carolina's highly segregated society in 1925 but its arbitrary, unfair, and painful divisions never made sense to him. He turned those doubts inside out, becoming one of the state's most influential educators and leaders of his generation in a time of great change. In turn, Doc transformed many lives of colleagues, teachers, and students who discovered the same passion for fairness and human decency that has marked this good man's life. This is a story of redemption and a heroic journey."--Bud Ferillo, South Carolina Collaborative for Race and Reconciliation, University of South Carolina "Good men vanish, but the good they accomplish often endures. This is a book about place and time and about a man who believed in fairness--a man who hungered for decency and labored to make South Carolina a better place for all people. In part the book is a Sermon from the Lowlands, not a sermon dozy with platitudes but a sermon rich with the treasures of the earth, those things that moth and rust corrupt--classrooms, people, football teams, mill towns, and green hills--those evanescent things that enrich our short lastings and make us love this bruised world."--Sam Pickering, University of Connecticut "William Dufford's memoir is a remarkable example of courage, passion, and determination. This is a book about one man's commitment to "justice and fairness" and how one can make a difference in the lives of all people, regardless of the color of their skin. It truly is an awesome read."--Peggy B. Winder, Newberry College "There are some among us who see a need and quickly responds. Bill Dufford is one who stood up to wrongs, whose maturing awareness of racial inequality led him to find solutions where he found unfairness. This book is testament to his journey toward South Carolina's--not only desegregation of schools--but full integration and voice for African American students, a path he had taken for numerous white students throughout his varied career in education. This narrative demonstrates how he inspired, influenced, and blustered his way, realizing a fully integrated, educated student body with fundamental rights and privileges of American society led to cooperation and a more perfect union."--Libby Bernardin, author of The Book of Myth and Layers of Song
William E. Dufford, a South Carolina native, served as a school principal in Georgetown, Beaufort, and Sumter and later as the superintendent of schools in York. He also served as an educational consultant for the Boston school system and as the director of field services for the University of South Carolina Center for Integrated Education. Dufford has been recognized with the South Carolina Governors Award in the Humanities and the South Carolina Order of the Palmetto, the states highest civilian honor. Now retired, he remains actively involved in Newberry Colleges annual Dufford Diversity and Inclusiveness Week and in the Newberry Opera Houses Dufford Center for Cultural Diversity. Ada Rogers is a writer for the University of South Carolina Honors College. Salley McInerney is a columnist for the State newspaper in South Carolina.