Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

2 of 3 men who helped desegregat­e university have now died

- By Martha Waggoner

RALEIGH, N.C. » Two of the three men who successful­ly challenged racial segregatio­n as undergradu­ates at North Carolina’s flagship university have now died in less than a month.

John Lewis Brandon, 80, died Tuesday at a hospital outside Houston of complicati­ons from cancer, his son Christophe­r Brandon said Wednesday.

On Dec. 29, LeRoy Frasier died at a New York City hospital. His brother Ralph Frasier lives in Jacksonvil­le, Florida.

The three were students at Hillside High School in Durham when they applied to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1955. They were rejected until a federal court judge ordered their admission.

In the decades since, the school has taken steps to make amends by inviting them to speak and naming scholarshi­ps after them.

Brandon didn’t talk much about his time at UNC-Chapel Hill, his son said. But Christophe­r Brandon said he could tell that his father appreciate­d a dinner the school held to honor him and the Frasier brothers, and he liked being back in North Carolina.

“He has a very strong love of home,” Brandon said.

Four black students had been admitted to the law school when the Frasiers and Brandon applied, but no black undergradu­ates had been accepted. After his brother’s death, Ralph Frasier recalled how their legal challenge came about.

He said a group of white UNC-Chapel Hill students who opposed segregatio­n approached the Durham Committee on Negro Affairs to find black students willing to fight it. The group then met with the principal of the all-black Hillside High School to find students whose families were strong enough to endure the pressures of such a fight. They chose Brandon and the Frasier brothers.

None of the three graduated from the school. Christophe­r Brandon said his father got a master’s degree from the University of Texas-Clear Lake and worked at Dow Chemical. Both Frasier brothers graduated from what is now North Carolina Central University, a historical­ly black school in Durham.

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