Hidden Heroes: The Underground Schools that Built the Civil Rights Movement

May 6, 2026

Event Details

Date: May 6, 2026
Time: 6:00 pm
–7:00 pm

Sponsored by

The Greenwich Historical Society, together with LWV Greenwich, is delighted to welcome award-winning reporter and acclaimed author of The Woman’s Hour, Elaine Weiss, to discuss her new book, Spell Freedom. Long-listed for the Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Non-Fiction, the book charts the efforts of four ordinary citizens in the South as they established secret schools to help black citizens overcome onerous Jim Crow laws and register to vote. The conversation will be moderated by academic leader and author, Susan Herbst. Professor Herbst is President Emeritus of the University of Connecticut where she currently serves as University Professor of Political Science.

Spell Freedom tells the story of a group of largely uncelebrated heroes of the civil rights movement and shows how they laid the foundation in the mid-1950s for the success of the Civil and Voting Rights Acts of the mid-1960s. Their secretive efforts helped establish over 900 citizenship schools across the South, while also nurturing a generation of activists – many of whom were women – trained in community organizing, political engagement, and the tactics of peaceful resistance. We hope you will join us for this inspirational story of how an unlikely group of people overcame the powerful forces arrayed against them to triumph in the face of injustice.

A book signing will follow the discussion from 7-7:45pm. Registrants will be able to purchase books from Dianne’s Books at the end of the program or before the event here.

Registrants can submit questions for the author in advance by sending them to Lauren Ackerley at the Greenwich Historical Society at lackerley@greenwichhistory.org.

Speaker Biography

Elaine Weiss

About Elaine Weiss

Elaine Weiss is a journalist and author whose writing has been recognized with prizes from the Society of Professional Journalists, her by-line has appeared in many national publications.

 

She is the author of three books of narrative history: The highly-acclaimed The Woman’s Hour: The Great Fight to Win the Vote — hailed as a “riveting, nail-biting political thriller” with powerful parallels to today’s political environment. The Woman’s Hour was a GoodReads Readers’ Choice Award winner, short-listed for the 2019 Chautauqua Prize, and received the American Bar Association’s highest honor, the 2019 Silver Gavel Award.

 

Her first book, Fruits of Victory: The Woman’s Land Army in the Great War was excerpted in Smithsonian Magazine and featured on C-Span and public radio stations nationwide.

 

Her newest book, Spell Freedom: The Underground Schools that Built the Civil Rights Movement, carries readers into the heart of the 20th century civil rights and voting rights struggle, and has won praise as a “powerful, intimate, and enlightening book” with “elegant writing, masterful storytelling, and prodigious research.”

 

Elaine is a popular public speaker and frequent media commentator, and was an historical advisor for the Broadway musical SUFFS. She lives in Baltimore with her husband, and they have two grown children. When not at her desk, she can be found paddling her little purple kayak on the Chesapeake Bay.

 

About Susan Herbst

Susan Herbst was appointed as the 15th President of the University of Connecticut on December 20, 2010, by the University’s Board of Trustees. She stepped down as President on July 1, 2019 and returned to the faculty. She teaches at the Stamford campus, where she is University Professor of Political Science and President Emeritus.

 

Prior to her appointment to the presidency, Herbst served as Executive Vice Chancellor and Chief Academic Officer of the University System of Georgia, where she led 15 university presidents and oversaw the academic missions for all 35 public universities in Georgia.  Before coming to Georgia, Herbst was Provost and Executive Vice President at The University at Albany (SUNY), and also served as Officer in Charge (acting president) of the school from 2006 to 2007.  She previously served as the Dean of the College of Liberal Arts at Temple University.

 

Born in New York City and raised in Peekskill, NY, Herbst received her B.A. in Political Science from Duke University in 1984, and her Ph.D. in Communication Theory and Research from the University of Southern California’s Annenberg School for Communication in Los Angeles in 1989.

 

Herbst joined Northwestern University as an assistant professor in 1989 and remained there until 2003.  At Northwestern she served in many capacities, including Professor of Political Science and Chair of the Department.  Dr. Herbst is a scholar of public opinion, media, and American politics, and is author of five books and many articles in these areas.  Along with Lawrence R. Jacobs, Adam J. Berinsky and Frances Lee, she edits the University of Chicago Press Studies in American Politics. Her most recent book, A Troubled Birth: The 1930s and American Public Opinion, was recently published by the University of Chicago Press.

 

 

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