Here are two books, one by a LHS graduate, Gilbert Mason (LHS 1945), that feature one of Lanier’s most endearing graduates and a legal giant who was one of the architects of the dismantling of segregation in the Jackson Public Schools and throughout the State of Mississippi, Fred Banks Jr (LHS 1960). Mr. Banks is still “young” and alive and well in Jackson, Mississippi. All should endeavor to know or meet Mr. Banks as he is a living hero and graduate of Lanier HS who should inspire us all — especially Lanier Bulldogs. Go to LHS web page for a link to Mr. Banks’ current whereabouts ; and do a “google” search on his name for several internet sites that recognize his many contributions and accomplishments.
The Hardest Deal of All: The Battle Over School Integration in Mississippi
by Charles C. Bolton University Press of Mississippi
Publisher: University Press of Mississippi / Date: Jan 2005
This book is about the struggle to integrate public schools in Mississippi.
Page 215:
“As Fred Banks [LHS 1960], an NAACP attorney who litigated many school cases, explained, the school integration fight was ‘the major thrust in breaking the back of governmental apartheid’ in Mississippi, an accomplishment that ultimately ‘affected other aspects of our society’ and ‘had ramifications way beyond just education.’ ”
Beaches, Blood, and Ballots
A Black Doctor’s Civil Rights Struggle
by Gilbert R. Mason , James Patterson Smith
ISBN: 1578062780 / Publisher: University Press of Mississippi / Date: Jan 2000 / Page Count: 256
This book, the first to focus on the integration of the Gulf Coast, is Dr. Gilbert R. Mason’s (LHS 1945) eyewitness account of harrowing episodes that occurred there during the civil rights movement. The book also acknowledges the role and contribution of Fred Banks, Jr (LHS 1960)
Page 153:
“Then there was the young black attorney Fred Banks [LHS 1960] who came aboard to handle part of the [school desegregation lawsuits] Fred Banks was a distinguished graduate of my alma mater, Lanier High School, and of Howard University Law School.”