Urban Sights: Urban History and Visual CultureMain MenuIntroductionConflicting Visions of Renewal in Pittsburgh's Hill District, 1950-1968 by Laura GrantmyreSan Francisco Views: Robert Bechtle and the Reformulation of Urban Vision by Bridget GilmanVisualizing Iraq: Oil, Cinema, and the Modern City by Mona DamlujiFilmic Witness to the 1964 Kitty Genovese Murder by Carrie RentschlerBuses from Nowhere: Television and Anti-busing Activism in 1970s Urban America by Matt DelmontMona Damluji89c6177132ce9094bd19f4e5159eb300a76ef0dfMatthew F. Delmont5676b5682f4c73618365582367c04a35162484d5Bridget Gilman032da9b6b9003c284100547a1d63b1ed9aca49e2Laura Grantmyre8add17c1c26ed9de6b804f44312bd03052f5735eCarrie Rentschlere7ded604f66cae2062fa490f51234edecd44a076
Irene McCabe in NAG t-shirt.
12014-03-13T10:13:08-07:00Matthew F. Delmont5676b5682f4c73618365582367c04a35162484d52553Irene McCabe in NAG t-shirt at anti-busing meeting in Memphis, 23 September 1971. Ed Haun / Detroit Free Press.plain2016-03-04T11:36:01-08:00Matthew F. Delmont5676b5682f4c73618365582367c04a35162484d5
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12013-07-22T10:31:22-07:00Irene McCabe and Pontiac's National Action Group22plain184172016-03-04T11:35:22-08:00Unlike Claude Kirk, Irene McCabe did not have the benefit of a governor’s travel budget, high-priced political consultants or ready access to media. Yet while thousands of parents across the nation raised their voices against busing, none received the same level of national television attention as McCabe. While McCabe did not have any formal media training, she proved skilful at making her National Action Group’s (NAG) protests into television-friendly events. 'She got up on those platforms and you’d think she was born on the stump', NAG’s lawyer L. Brooks Patterson noted after McCabe’s death in 2004. Born and raised in Pontiac, McCabe claimed never to have travelled south of Detroit before she started protesting busing at the age of 36. Like many other women who became grassroots activists, McCabe, a married mother of three, emphasized her lived experiences as a mother and housewife as the reasons she became involved in politics. McCabe regularly described her and her fellow marchers as 'ordinary housewives and mothers', and explained to a Washington Post reporter, 'I’m an amateur. When I address people at rallies, if they can relate to me it’s just because they know I’m the same type of person they are, that I am a housewife…just mainstream, grass-roots America.' Most housewives, of course, were not interviewed in major newspapers and did not regularly appear on the nightly television news. McCabe’s televisual appeal drew on her ability visibly to lead and capably speak for anti-busing parents, while also being able persuasively to present herself as a representative member of this group. More than simply an example of white backlash to civil rights, McCabe learned from other protest movements, creating television-ready scenes that garnered attention and framed her cause in a favourable light. Most notably, McCabe led a 620-mile 'mothers' march' from Pontiac to Washington DC in support of an anti-busing amendment that was covered on ABC, CBS and NBC. As historian Nathan Irvin Huggins noted in 1978, television cameras 'broadcast the sentiments of the white, Pontiac, Michigan, housewife protesting "forced busing" as earnestly as they had the achievement of Mrs. Rosa Parks in the Montgomery bus boycott'. As Huggins suggests, McCabe successfully leveraged television news coverage to bring Pontiac’s school desegregation battle to millions of television viewers and further promoted busing as a national issue.