The right to love: fifty years ago, in Loving v. Virginia, the Supreme Court made mixed-race marriages legal across the U.S.

AuthorBrown, Bryan
PositionTIMES PAST 1967

The sheriff and his men arrived at 2 in the morning. Richard Loving heard the knocking, but before he could get out of bed, the officers broke through the door and burst into the bedroom. Later, Mildred Loving recalled the sudden panic, the flashlights in her face. "They asked Richard who [1 was]. I said, 'I'm his wife.' The sheriff said, 'Not around here you're not.'"

Richard, who was white, and Mildred, who was black and Native American, were a married couple, and in 1958 in rural Caroline County, Virginia, that was a crime. The marriage violated Virginia's 1924 Racial Integrity Act, which made it "unlawful for any white person in this State to marry [anyone except] a white person."

For their offense, the Lovings were exiled from their home state and nearly imprisoned. But they fought back in court, and their case eventually made it all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. In 1967, the justices ruled in their favor, erasing laws in 16 states that banned interracial marriage. Fifty years later, Loving v. Virginia, now the subject of a new movie called Loving, continues to help protect the right of all Americans to marry anyone they want.

"It creates an extraordinary freedom that's suddenly everywhere--it's universal, it covers everybody," says Peter Wallenstein, a history professor at Virginia Tech and author of Tell the Court I Love My Wife: Race, Marriage, and Law--An American History. It didn't matter whether you were Vietnamese or Korean, Jewish or Catholic--nothing mattered anymore, you were free to marry and not face arrest."

Slavery & the 14th Amendment

By the time the Lovings were arrested, nearly a century had passed since the ratification of the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution in 1868. It guaranteed "equal protection of the laws" to all Americans regardless of race. Yet African-Americans continued to face many barriers to equality (see timeline, p. 20).

This was especially true in the formerly slaveholding South. There, local and state "Jim Crow" laws discriminated against blacks in nearly every facet of life and protected the dominance and "racial purity" of whites.

Among these laws were bans on interracial marriage. The bans had been on the books in most U.S. states at one point or another, but the rules and how they were enforced varied from state to state. In the South, authorities tended to crack down mostly on marriages between blacks and whites, especially if the man was black and the woman white, according to Wallenstein. But marriages between whites and Chinese, Japanese, and Native Americans also occasionally came under fire. This was particularly true in cases when one spouse died and his or her relatives contested the marriage so they could inherit money or property.

What qualified as white also varied. Wallenstein says that for a long time in California and much of the rest of the U.S., marriage laws classified Latinos as white as long as they didn't have African ancestry. In places like Oklahoma, anyone without African ancestry was considered white, including Chinese and Native Americans.

There had been several attempts prior to Loving to challenge mixed-race-marriage bans before the Supreme Court, according to Wallenstein. But after taking on Brown v. Board of Education, the landmark school desegregation case, in 1954, the Court thought the timing for a case on mixed marriage wasn't quite right.

"[The Court] said, 'Hey, look, you know we're all caught up in this fracas over schools,"' says Wallerstein. "'It will only make life more difficult in school desegregation if we address this now.'"

Despite segregation laws across the South, in places like Caroline County, where Mildred and Richard grew up, the lives of blacks and whites were pretty intertwined.

'Mixing All the Time'

"[My parents] grew up within three or four miles of each other," Richard and Mildred's daughter, Peggy Loving, said in a 2011 documentary about the case. Mildred's brothers played music at parties Richard attended. Black and white families in Caroline County routinely helped harvest each other's crops. In that small world, it wasn't so incredible that Mildred Jeter and Richard Loving would meet and fall in love.

"People had been mixing all the time, so I didn't know any different," Mildred later said. "I didn't know there was a law against it."

Even so, Richard and Mildred knew that some people in their community felt threatened by racial mixing. When they got married in June 1958, they did it quietly in Washington, D.C. About five weeks later, they were arrested back home.

Brought before Judge Leon Bazile in January 1959, the Lovings feared...

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