In 1962, students at Miles College, a historically Black school in Fairfield, just outside of Birmingham, led an economic boycott to pressure downtown stores to stop discriminating against African Americans.
The student-led boycott succeeded in putting Birmingham on the radar of Martin Luther King Jr., and other national activists who came to town the following year and made Birmingham the epicenter of the fight for civil rights.
The Miles student-led boycott is the subject of a 56-minute documentary called Stand!: Untold Stories From the Civil Rights Movement. The film describes how Frank Dukes, a 31-year-old Miles College SGA president, teamed up with classmates and local activists to organize a boycott to compel retailers to discontinue whites-only dressing rooms, bathrooms, and water fountains and to hire Blacks for more than just custodial jobs.
Donna Dukes, Dukes’s daughter, who wrote, produced and directed the film, says she made the documentary because she felt her father’s contributions to the civil rights movement had been overlooked. “I wanted to make this film because my mother and I felt it was important to tell the story of Miles College’s involvement in the civil rights movement, and specifically, about my dad’s involvement and his courage and leadership,” she says.
Moreover, the documentary attempts to dispel the myth that leaders in the movement were all Black, male and members of the clergy.
“Stand!” features interviews with Dukes and other boycott leaders such as Miles College Professor Jonathan McPherson; Miles alumnus Judge U.W. Clemon; and three upper middle class Black housewives, Deenie Drew, Althea Montgomery and Ruth Barefield-Pendelton. All were members of the committee that organized the boycott.
Miles’s president at the time, Dr. Lucius Pitts, arranged for the committee to meet secretly with prominent whites such as Emil Hess, whose family owned the department store Parisian, and James Arthur Head of the office supply company James A. Head & Co.
Other civil rights activists seen in the film include prominent attorney J. Mason Davis; Nims Gay, Dr. Willie Clyde Jones, and the Rev. Joseph Lowery.
Donna Dukes, a Miles College alumna herself, says she also made the film at the urging of her mother, Jacqueline Dukes, who frequently became irritated when watching documentaries about the civil rights movement. “During one particular event, we were watching a documentary, and my mom was so angry, and she asked my dad, ‘Frank, what about you? What about Miles College? What about the campaign?’ And he’d say, ‘Jac, calm down. We didn’t do it for glory. We did it because it was the right thing to do.’ And I’m my mother’s daughter, and I was mad, too.”