THIS PROGRAM IS OVERSUBSCRIBED

If you would like to be added to our waiting list, 
please complete the online registration form. 
If space becomes available, we will contact you.

 

When

Thursday July 9, 2015 from 6:00 PM to 8:00 PM EDT
Add to Calendar 

Where

Roosevelt House at Hunter College
47-49 East 65th Street
(btwn. Park and Madison Avenues)
New York, NY 10065


 
Driving Directions 

Contact

rhrsvp@hunter.cuny.edu

Arthur Browne in conversation with Jack Rosenthal
Thursday, July 9, 2015
Program 6:00 pm
Reception and Book singing to follow 

One Righteous Man: Samuel Battle and the Shattering of the Color Line in New York

When Samuel Battle broke the color line as New York City's first African American cop in the second decade of the twentieth century, he had to fear his racist colleagues as much as criminals. He had to be three times better than his white peers, and many times more resilient. His life was threatened. He was displayed like a circus animal. Yet, fearlessly claiming his rights, he prevailed in a four-decade odyssey that is both the story of one man's courageous dedication to racial progress and a harbinger of the divisions between police and the people they serve that plague twenty-first-century America. 

Realizing that his story was the story of race in New York across the first half of the century, Battle commissioned a biography to be written by none other than Langston Hughes, the preeminent voice of the Harlem Renaissance. But their eighty-thousand-word collaboration failed to find a publisher, and has remained unpublished since. Using Hughes's manuscript, which is quoted liberally throughout this book, as well as his own archival research and interviews with survivors, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Arthur Browne has created an important and compelling social history of New York, revealed a fascinating episode in the life of Langston Hughes, and delivered the riveting life and times of a remarkable and unjustly forgotten man, setting Samuel Battle where he belongs in the pantheon of American civil rights pioneers. 

Mr. Battle was also the father of Hunter alumna Charline E. Battle Cherot '34.

Arthur Browne has written the first-draft history of New York for more than forty years. As a reporter and editor, he has chronicled six mayors, from Abe Beame through Bill de Blasio, and coauthored I, Koch, a biography of Mayor Ed Koch. Browne presently serves as the Daily News editorial page editor. In 2007, he led a team that won the Pulitzer Prize for editorials that documented the epidemic illnesses afflicting thousands of 9/11 rescue and recovery workers.