“We Were Married on the Second Day of June, and the Police Came After Us the 14th of July.”Posted in Articles, Biography, History, Law, Media Archive, United States, Virginia on 2016-11-13 23:21Z by Steven |
“We Were Married on the Second Day of June, and the Police Came After Us the 14th of July.”
The Washingtonian
2016-11-02
Hillary Kelly, Design & Style Editor
Richard and Mildred Loving. Photograph by Grey Villet.
An oral history, nearly 50 years later, of the landmark Virginia case that legalized interracial marriage—and is the subject of a talked-about movie out this month.
In June 1958, Mildred Jeter and Richard Loving drove from their home in Central Point, Virginia, to Washington, DC, to be married. Twenty-four states, including Virginia, still outlawed interracial marriage at the time. Mildred was part Native American and part African-American; Richard was white. Their union would eventually result in their banishment from the state and a nine-year legal battle.
On November 4, almost 50 years after the Supreme Court’s 1967 decision that the Lovings’ marriage was valid—and that marriage is a universal right—Hollywood is set to release Loving, already on Oscar lists. As director Jeff Nichols explained when asked why he took on the project, “We have very painful wounds in this country, and they need to be brought out into the light. And it’s gonna be an awkward, uncomfortable, painful conversation that’s going to continue for a while.”
The movie focuses on Mildred and Richard’s romance. We looked behind the scenes of the struggle itself, talking to insiders including the couple’s attorneys—then just out of law school—to revisit the case. One remarkable aspect: Unlike other civil-rights champions of their era, the Lovings never set out to change the course of history. “What happened, we really didn’t intend for it to happen,” Mildred said in 1992. “What we wanted, we wanted to come home.”
This is the story of how a quiet couple from rural Virginia brought about marriage equality for themselves, and for all…
Read the entire article here.