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Allied for Justice: J.C. Herrin and American Baptists in the Civil Rights Movement

By author: Deborah Bingham Van Broekhoven, James W. Trent Jr.
Product Code: P761
ISBN: 9798897360550
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In April of 1968, the Rev. Julius Caesar Herrin sat at a table in the home of Martin Luther King, Jr., opening sympathy letters to Coretta. A white minister working behind the scenes in the Civil Rights Movement, Herrin assisted Historically Black Colleges and Universities seeking to strengthen weak finances and supported students working to dismantle segregation. With grant funding, Herrin awarded scholarships to activists, including John Lewis, Bernard Lafayette, Diane Nash, Bernice Johnson, and Stokely Carmichael. To do so, Herrin collaborated with leaders of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, the National Council of Churches, the Southern Project of the National Student Association, and the Southern Conference Education Fund. This biography traces Herrin's life from a mill town in North Carolina to the national scene. His life is a microcosm of struggles within the American church to create the Beloved Community. Herrin's work was possible because his liberal theology and support for interracial meetings resulted in his firing in 1954 by North Carolina Baptists, for whom he worked with the Baptist Student Union at UNC Chapel Hill. That firing forced him to move north, where he ministered in an American Baptist church. The Field Foundation, the American Baptist Home Mission Societies, and other American Baptist organizations in 1958 provided funds for Herrin's return south and his entry into the Civil Rights Movement. Additionally, Herrin's cultivation of congregations supporting civil rights resulted in the 1970 formation of the American Baptist Churches of the South.
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Reviews

Review by: Anthea Butler, emeritus Geraldine R. Segal Professor of American Social Thought, University of Pennsylvania, and author of WHITE EVANGELICAL RACISM - June 11, 2026
"ALLIED FOR JUSTICE is a vital story revealing an unsung yet important hero of the Civil Rights Movement, J.C. Herrin, and the crucial behind the scenes work that helped luminaries of the movement continue their work. Van Broekhoven and Trent painstaking research and illuminate the importance of interracial cooperation and denominational commitments that helped to undergird the Civil Rights Movement. Their book is an important contribution to the field of American religion and the history of civil rights in America."
Review by: Curtis W. Freeman, research professor of Theology and Ruth D. Duncan Director of the Baptist House of Studies, Duke Divinity School, and author of CONTESTING CATHOLICITY and UNDOMESTICATED DISSENT - June 11, 2026
"This book tells the wonderful story of a small minority of white Baptists in the South who advocated for full inclusion of black Americans into society, and perhaps more surprisingly into Christian churches. One of those prophetic voices was J.C. Herrin. For those who believe that all Baptists in the South in the Civil Rights Era were racists, this book is a wake-up call. There is much work to be done, but whatever progress lies ahead will be made because of the foundation already laid."
Review by: Riggins R. Earl Jr., former Andrew Mellon Professor of Ethics and Theology, Interdenominational Theological Center, and author of DARK SYMBOLS and editor of THE UNFINISHED DREAM - June 11, 2026
"Van Broekhoven and Trent introduce readers, via archival sources, to a Christian moral giant who defied racist customs and laws of the segregated South for change. J.C. Herrin displayed a faith that positioned him against the white racist majority. Herrin's work of Christian race relations fits in with the work of such Southern white Christian ministers as Carlye Marney, Will Campell, and Baxton Bryant, to name a few. They worked behind the scenes to make the King-led movement for social justice possible. This is a work that must be taken seriously by contemporary churchgoers."

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