
Distributed
for the University of Arkansas Media Services
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Silas
Hunt
A Documentary
The School of Continuing Education and Academic Outreach’s
Media Services
Produced and directed by Chris Erwin
Written by Thomas Jordan
Award-winning documentary about a genuine hero of the civil
rights movement
This documentary
chronicles the life of civil rights pioneer Silas H. Hunt
from his childhood years, his service in the armed forces,
and the challenges he faced in 1948 when he was the first
African American admitted to the University of Arkansas Law
School. In fact, he was the first African American admitted
to the university since Reconstruction and the first to be
admitted for graduate or professional studies at any all-white
southern university.
Hunt was a decorated World War II veteran from Texarkana,
Arkansas, when he enrolled in the law school. He completed
one semester of classes before becoming ill and withdrawing
from school. He died the following year from tuberculosis,
aggravated by injuries he had received during the Battle of
the Bulge. His admission to the university began a process
of integration that would follow at universities throughout
the South.
Producer-director
Erwin and his crew traveled seventeen thousand miles in twelve
states, shot fifty-six hours of videotape, and found 2,500
documents and images. Narrated by Emmy-nominated actor Steve
Harris (The Practice), the documentary has won five
awards: an Aegis Winner’s Award, an Aurora Gold Award,
a Telly Bronze Award, and a Platinum Ava Award. In 2008 it
was nominated for an Emmy by the Mid-America Chapter of the
National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.
July
$19.95 DVD (s) 63 minutes
UPC 094922273864
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