c.2020, HMH Books
$27
320 pages

Remember, remember โ€ฆ ?

Skipping school, good teachers, hard lessons, practical jokes, smelly lockers, remember? If you donโ€™t, your oldest friends probably do. As in the new book โ€œThe Last Negroes at Harvardโ€ by Kent Garrett with Jeanne Ellsworth, they were there alongside you when everything happened, remember?

For many years, Kent Garrett claimed that he โ€œrarely thought about Harvard.โ€ Yes, it was his alma mater, but there was more to him than his graduation from an Ivy League school. He had a career and later, a dairy farm to run. Being one of a handful of โ€œNegroโ€ graduates from an esteemed college was a small part of who Garrett was.

But then he discovered that a Harvard upperclassman died, and he began to do what he said he didnโ€™t: he thought about Harvard.

Garrett was just 17 the fall of 1959, when his family drove him to Harvard and helped him carry his belongings to a room heโ€™d share with another boy, one who happened also to be a โ€œNegro.โ€ There were, as Garrett later learned, 18 โ€œNegroesโ€ in the class of 1963, scattered among various dorms. Eventually, he met most of them, and they gathered daily to eat lunch; they also socialized together because, although Harvard strove to avoid racism, social segregation off-campus was still generally mandatory.

As they moved into their dorms that fall, Americans were just learning that the Soviet Union was capable of launching missiles from submarines. A war in a country halfway across the world had its first two casualties. Mike Wallace had done a TV report on Black Muslims and Malcolm X, shocking white America.

The freshmen who hoped theyโ€™d survive at Harvard became sophomores, then juniors, then seniors.

In their college careers, the โ€œNegroesโ€ saw protests and sit-ins, violence and calls for peace. They met people whoโ€™d influence history, and others whoโ€™d die too early. And by the time they graduated, 18 men had learned that they were not โ€œNegroesโ€ anymore โ€ฆ

Itโ€™s really hard not to love โ€œThe Last Negroes at Harvardโ€ right from the get-go. Author Kent Garrett tells his story with a gee-whiz, down-to-earth demeanor that makes friends with a reader quickly. Itโ€™s a warm tale that can be confusing in its overload of names and nicknames, but Garrettโ€™s portrayals of his classmates lets readers know that these young men were nevertheless unique individuals with ideals, strengths and promise.

But this book isnโ€™t only about 18 Black men. Itโ€™s also a snapshot of a burgeoning civil rights movement, and a country thatโ€™s evolving. We get a peek of life on the edge of change, when college-age men wore ties to dinner. We watch as protests arrived in Boston, โ€œthe Pillโ€ was whispered about, segregation eased in the North, sit-ins became a thing, and language changed, too.

Know that this is not merely a book of nostalgia for older folk: itโ€™s also for younger readers heading for college, or for lovers of social history. Sit down with this book, and be delighted. โ€œThe Last Negroes at Harvardโ€ is one youโ€™ll remember.

This correspondent is a guest contributor to The Washington Informer.

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