Career of USA Writer-in-Residence Frye Gaillard Defined by Race Relations
Posted on October 9, 2015

Mobile native grew up with the Civil Rights movement, absorbing its courageous and bloody history the way fellow Baby Boomers soaked up televisions Leave it to Beaver or Bill Haleys ground-breaking anthem Rock Around the Clock.
Gaillard was 9 years old in December 1955 when Montgomery resident Rosa Parks refusal to give up her bus seat to a white man hurled civil rights into the national stratosphere overnight, turning the South into a battleground for racial equality.
I came of age during that time, and I remember conversations at the dinner table about the Montgomery bus boycott that followed Rosa Parks refusal to give up her seat, Gaillard recalled. Those days were a part of my own identity gelling and my coming to the conclusion that while I was coming of age in an area I loved very much, it was also a place that was deeply flawed.
Gaillard, writer-in-residence at the 酴圖傻弝け and author or editor of more than 20 books, including the acclaimed Cradle of Freedom: Alabama and the Movement that Changed America, recalls that time as crucial to his career as a journalist, editor and writer. It was a subject that grabbed me in college, that I wrote about as a news reporter and it continued to grab me after I left the news business, he said.
In 2005, Cradle of Freedom won the Lillian Smith Book Award, and the Alabama Library Association selected it for Book of the Year. Cradle of Freedom is this semesters choice for the Universitys Common Read Program, something that has pleased Gaillard because of a new generations interest.
Today, Gaillard works out of an office inside the department of communications. Books, mostly about the South, history and politics, line his shelves. Next to his desk, the waste basket overflows with printed pages, the rejected bits and pieces of his next book. Much of Gaillards thinking, remembering and writing is done here or at his home, located south of Mobile. The thoughts and ideas vary, yet racial justice is always prominent.
The story resonates today because the issue of race is still prevalent in our society. How do you live in peace and mutual respect with people who arent exactly like you? That is the American story in many ways. Europeans moved to a continent already inhabited by a group of people, and our ancestors brought in slaves that set this country on a certain path, Gaillard said. And, I think its going to be our story far into the future. I think its a mistake in this country to even conceive of the day that there will ever be a day this wont be an issue, but for better or worse, its our story.
The years have brought Gaillard full circle, despite the long trip he took to get to USA. He grew up in Mobiles Springhill neighborhood on Old Shell Road in a little house next door to his grandfather and across from Spring Hill College. In the summers, he played city league softball. Gaillard attended Vanderbilt University, majoring in history, but kept one foot in the Port City by working summers as a news intern at the Mobile Press Register. He joined the staff as a full-time reporter following graduation in 1968, but soon he moved to Nashville to report for the Associated Press. A stint with the Ford Foundation magazine The Race Relations Reporter followed before he landed at the Charlotte Observer.
As the Old South of the Lost Cause gave way to the New South of the Sunbelt, Gaillard covered the changes, including Charlottes landmark school desegregation controversy, the rise and fall of televangelist Jim Bakker, the funeral of Elvis Presley and the presidency of Jimmy Carter. He witnessed so much of the Souths changes that he eventually acquired the newspapers title of Southern editor.
Ive always written about race relations, including some of the things that happened in Alabama in the late 1960s, Gaillard said. When I moved from newspaper work and then put on the historians hat, it wasnt that different. You know, journalists take the first cut of history.
A respected editor, he left daily newspapers in 1990 while he was still in his 40s.
Newspapers were changing. It was becoming harder and harder to do the in-depth reporting that I valued so much, and I was tired of the daily deadline grind, he said.
For 10 years, he and his wife, Nancy, continued to live on their five-acre farm with horses outside Charlotte while he wrote a column for an alternative newspaper and worked on books. Gaillard admits hed never considered returning to Mobile to live until 2004 when he faced two situations common to his generation an aging parent and the challenge of a new career.
Im an only child, and my mother had just turned 90, he said. The other thing was Id met Dr. Clarence Mohr, head of the history department, and he offered me a job to teach one course per semester, to interact with students, do public outreach and to generate public discussion about things that mattered. I actually jumped at the opportunity, and I had a good sense that good things were happening at South Alabama.
As writer-in-residence, Gaillard teaches classes across a variety of disciplines, focusing on history, writing and southern politics. Recently, he was named to the interdisciplinary faculty of the Universitys Center for the Study of War and Memory. The one-of-a-kind center studies the collective memory of war and its impact on society, both in the United States and abroad.
The Gaillards own a house on Fowl River, which he considers his backyard. They often fish and birdwatch from their 17-foot boat powered by an outboard motor. When the couples blended family joins them, theres two daughters, a son and four grandkids sharing their slice of heaven.
Now 68, Gaillard enjoys telling people that you can teach an old dog new tricks. Besides his writing and teaching, he has branched out into songwriting and participated in a documentary based on his book In the Path of the Storm, which won a regional Emmy for its look at how Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and the Deep Water Horizon oil spill in 2010 devastated the fishing village of Bayou La Batre.
I love Bayou La Batre because its multi-ethnic with black, white and Asian residents, and they have, by and large, made their different cultures work not by sitting down and singing Kumbaya but because their work ethic is what ties them together, he said. I was happy to have the opportunity to write about it.
Next year, his first novel, Go South to Freedom, will be published by New South Books of Montgomery.
Its a historical novel for children based on a piece of oral history told to me by an elderly African-American friend of mine whose slave ancestors ran away south instead of north, Gaillard explained. I felt it was a chance to put a face on history for children.
When the novel is published, there will be travel for book signings, interviews and speeches to various civic groups, but afterward Gaillard will return home to Mobile to remember, to write and, hopefully, to contribute to future positive changes.
I think the city has changed for the better by a large margin, and Im always pleased to be back here, he said. I often think how the 酴圖傻弝け has put tens of thousands of well-educated people into the life here over the years. I believe we as educators have a role to nudge people to look honestly at the problems that weve had as a city, state and region. If we do that, and if we make a difference, then all that weve done feels real meaningful.
To learn more about Frye Gaillard, his books and other projects, visit