Gilbert R. Mason
Dr. Gilbert R. Mason Sr. (October 7, 1928 – July 8, 2006), was a physician who was a family practitioner and civil rights leader in Biloxi, Mississippi. He is noted for organizing three wade-ins, from 1959 to 1963, to desegregate the city's public beaches, which had been made with federal funds. This was the first nonviolent civil disobedience action conducted in Mississippi in the 1950s.[1]
Dr. Gilbert R. Mason Sr. | |
---|---|
Born | Gilbert Rutledge Mason[1] October 7, 1928 |
Died | July 8, 2006 77) | (aged
Education | Tennessee State University (1949), Howard University (1954)[1] |
Spouse(s) |
Natalie Lorraine Hamlar
(m. 1950–1999)Gwendolyn Lewis Anderson
(m. 2004) |
Children | 8 |
After conducting the second protest on April 24, 1960, which was attacked by white mobs, Mason helped found the Biloxi chapter of the NAACP, and was elected president. He served in that position for more than 30 years, as well as head of the Mississippi state NAACP.
In addition to his practice, Mason gained full privileges at Biloxi Regional Hospital and later served as chairman of family practice there. Late in life he wrote a memoir about his early political activities, called Beaches, Blood, and Ballots: A Black Doctor's Civil Rights Struggle (2000).
Biography
Gilbert Mason was born in Jackson, Mississippi, the capital, to Willie Atwood Mason and Adeline (Jackson) Mason. He received his secondary education in Jackson. In 1949, Mason graduated from Tennessee State University with a BS degree and received an MD degree in 1954 from Howard University, a historically black college.[3] He served his internship in St. Louis, Missouri.
In 1955, Dr. Mason moved to the Gulf Coast and established a family medical practice in Biloxi, Mississippi.[1] He was the second African-American doctor in Harrison County, after Dr. Felix Dunn from Biloxi. Dunn had established his practice in Gulfport, where he also led the local NAACP branch. The two doctors became colleagues.
Mason had married Natalie Hamlar in 1950. They had children together, including a son, Gilbert Mason Jr., who became a doctor like his father. Dr. Mason also had two other sons, David Antony Mason and Adam Atwood Mason in 1977 and 1978 respectively. During his medical career, Mason quickly gained respect, but due to local racial conditions, he did not have full privileges at Biloxi Hospital for 15 years. He eventually became chairman of the family practice section at Biloxi Regional Hospital.
In 1997, Mason suffered a stroke, and his wife Natalie died in 1999. Mason retired from his medical practice in 2002. In 2004 he married again, to Gwendolyn Lewis Anderson.[2]
Civil rights leader
Dr. Mason is most notable for organizing and participating in Mississippi's first nonviolent civil disobedience action, known as the Biloxi wade-ins, which took place from 1959 to 1963.[1][4] He and some other men concerned about local conditions set up a Citizens Action Committee, hoping to lessen discrimination. In 1959 he and Dr. Felix Dunn and their families, including children, went swimming at the Biloxi beach to protest the racial segregation of the 26-mile long public waterfront. He and Dunn were taken to the police station and told they could not use the sand beaches, that these were claimed as private property by adjacent homeowners.
In April 1960, Mason returned to the beach and was arrested. When other African Americans learned of this, they expressed their support of him. A week later on April 24, 1960, he and others gathered at the beach in a second wade-in to assert their rights to use the public lands. The group of 125 people included elderly men and women, as well as younger adults, teenagers and children. They were attacked by groups of whites across the beaches, in what became known as "Bloody Sunday". The Biloxi police stood by without taking action.[5]
Mason led a third wade-in protest at the beach in the spring 1963, two weeks after the funeral for Medgar Evers, who was assassinated. The protesters faced a much larger group of nearly 2000 white protesters, but this time the police prevented violence against them. A legal challenge to the segregation had been initiated by the US Department of Justice in May 1960, but had been delayed in getting a court hearing. It was not decided until 1968, when the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that Mississippi beaches were public (private homeowners had claimed territory on the beach and into the water) and had to be desegregated by federal law. The state decided against appealing the decision to the US Supreme Court.[6][7]
Next actions
In 1960, Mason and other activists organized a grassroots effort for a voter registration drive. African Americans had been largely disenfranchised since the turn of the century by the 1890 constitution that imposed poll taxes and literacy tests as barriers. Administration by white officials meant that rulings were subjectively decided against African Americans.
After the wade-in protests, Mason and other activists formed the first chapter in Biloxi of the NAACP; he was chosen as president and served in that position for the next 34 years.[5] Mason also served as president of the Mississippi state NAACP for 33 years.[2]
In 2000, Mason published a memoir about the wade-ins, entitled Beaches, Blood, and Ballots: A Black Doctor's Civil Rights Struggle. It was written with James Patterson Smith and published by University Press of Mississippi.[1]
Death and legacy
Mason died on July 8, 2006, in Ocean Springs, Mississippi. He was interred in Biloxi City Cemetery, Biloxi, Mississippi.
Mason's contributions to the civil rights movement were honored posthumously in May 2009 and 2010. The state of Mississippi designated a section of U.S. Highway 90 near Biloxi as the "Dr. Gilbert Mason Sr. Memorial Highway."[6] In addition, the state installed historic markers commemorating these civil rights events on the beach in 2009 and at the Biloxi Light in 2010, to mark the 50th anniversaries of two of the wade-in events.
A Head Start center in Biloxi was named for him in 2010.
In 2019, the National Science Foundation announced that its third Regional Class Research Vessel would be named in Mason's honor. The Research Vessel Gilbert R. Mason will have dual homeports at the Port of Gulfport and Houma, LA, and will be operated by the Gulf – Caribbean Oceanographic Consortium, led by the University of Southern Mississippi (USM) and the Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium (LUMCON).[8]
References
- A Concurrent Resolution Expressing the Sympathy of the Legislature on the Death of Dr. Gilbert Mason, Sr., Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 505, Mississippi Legislature, First Extraordinary Session 2006 retrieved 2016-12-17.
- Physicians, Dentists and Nurses: Gilbert R. Mason, Biloxi Historical Society Retrieved 2016-12-18.
- The HistoryMakers: Dr. Gilbert R. Mason, Sr. Retrieved 2016-12-18.
- Mason, Gilbert R.; with Smith, James Patterson (2000). Beaches, Blood, and Ballots: A Black Doctor's Civil Rights Struggle. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 1578062780.
- Matthew Pitt (19 April 2010). "A Civil Rights Watershed in Biloxi, Mississippi". Smithsonian.com. Retrieved 2016-12-18.
- Newsom, Michael (May 17, 2009). "Marker Honors Struggle of Many". Sun Herald. Biloxi, MS. Retrieved October 4, 2016 – via Newsbank.
- Elise Roberts (10 May 2009). "Remembering the Biloxi wade-ins". WLOX News. Retrieved 2016-12-18.
- "NSF Oceanographic Research Ship to be Named for Gulf Coast Civil Rights Icon". unols.org. Retrieved 2020-03-11.
Further reading
- Amy Lemco (28 April 2023). Wading In: Desegregation on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 9781496847164.