Featured Advertisers
Mon, Nov. 30  -   -  Mobile  -  RSS
  

Make a post about this story on FredTalk. Get a printer-friendly version of this page. E-mail this story to a friend.

Visit the Photo Place

View the Westmoreland County community page

The Lovings: In the national spotlight

Date published: 2/16/2005

When Richard and Mildred Loving of Caroline County married in 1958, they planned to raise their family in the rural area they’d always called home.

But the law wouldn’t allow the mixed marriage. The groom was white, and the bride, part black and Indian.

Caroline County deputies burst into the Lovings’ bedroom five weeks after they married and arrested them. The judge sentenced them to a year in jail, then suspended it—if the couple stayed out of Virginia for 25 years.

The Lovings moved to Washington, but didn’t want to raise their three children in the slums. Five years later, they returned to Caroline to appeal the ruling, with help from the American Civil Liberties Union.

The national spotlight was the last thing the Lovings sought, but it shone brightly as their legal quest went on for several years.

In 1967, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the law, leading to similar rulings in 16 other states.

Richard Loving died in a car crash in 1975. In 1996, when a cable channel came to Caroline to make a movie about the couple, Mildred Loving was still living next to the house where her late husband grew up.

She reluctantly granted an interview, but said she was tired of talking about the case. The Lovings never considered themselves civil-rights champions.

“We are not doing it because somebody had to do it and we wanted to be the ones,” Richard Loving said in 1966, when he and his wife were featured in Life magazine. “We are doing it for us—because we want to live here.”


Our history
Click here to return to the index page, or navigate the profiles
by clicking on the names below.
• Gabriel Prosser,
inspired by the Bible

• Noah Davis,
freed his family

• Fannie Richards
ahead of her time

• John J. Wright
devoted leader, reader

• Walker-Grant,
the men behind the school name

• Buffalo soldiers,
one earned highest military honor

• Urbane Bass,
city doctor

• Maddens of Culpeper,
'We were always free'

• H.H. Poole,
Stafford institution

• Sadie Combs,
first teacher at Snell

• Philip Wyatt,
Soft-spoken activist

• Palmer Hayden,
Painter of the people

• Venus Jones,
First black graduate of MWC

• The Lovings,
In the National Spotlight

• John DeBaptist,
Revolutionary War sailor

• Rachael Steers and Susan Loushing,
petitioning for change

Sources: "A Different Story" by Ruth Coder Fitzgerald; HistoryPoint.org of the Central Rappahannock Regional Library; The Free Lance-Star archives; State of Michigan Web site; African Within; The Kennedy Center; We Were Always Free By T.O. Madden Jr.; The Richmond Times-Dispatch; Life Magazine; Westmoreland County, Virginia.



Follow us on
twitter
fredericksburg.com Facebook page


Date published: 2/16/2005