Las Vegas Review-Journal

Last student of Black trio to desegregat­e UNC dies at 85

- By Gary D. Robertson

RALEIGH, N.C. — Ralph Kennedy Frasier, the final surviving member of a trio of Black youths who were the first to desegregat­e the undergradu­ate student body at North Carolina’s flagship public university in the 1950s, has died.

Frasier, who had been in declining health over the past several months, died May 8 at age 85 at the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonvil­le, Florida, according to son Ralph Frasier Jr. A memorial service was scheduled for Saturday in Columbus, Ohio, where Frasier spent much of his working career.

Frasier, his older brother Leroy and John Lewis Brandon — all Durham high school classmates — fought successful­ly against Jim Crow laws when they were able to attend the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in the fall of 1955. Leroy Frasier died in late 2017, with Brandon following weeks later.

Initially, the Hillside High School students’ enrollment applicatio­ns were denied, even though the UNC law school had been integrated a few years earlier. And the landmark Brown vs. Board of Education decision that outlawed segregatio­n happened in 1954.

The trustee board of UNC — the nation’s oldest public university — then passed a resolution barring the admission of Blacks as undergradu­ates. The students sued and a federal court ordered they be admitted. The ruling ultimately was affirmed by the U.S. Supreme Court.

The trio became plaintiffs, in part, because their families were insulated from financial retributio­n — the brothers’ parents worked for Blackowned North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Co. in Durham, for example. The brothers were 14 months apart in age, but Ralph started his education early.

After the legal victory, it still was not easy being on campus. In an interview at the time of his brother’s death, Frasier recalled that the school’s golf course and the university-owned Carolina Inn were off-limits. At football games, they were seated in a section with custodial workers, who were Black. And the three lived on their own floor of a section of a dormitory.

“Those days were probably the most stressful of my life,” Frasier told The Associated Press in 2010 when the three visited Chapel Hill to be honored. “I can’t say that I have many happy memories.”

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Ralph Frasier

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