A
Princeton pioneer When Joseph Ralph Moss ’51 broke through the color line
By Mark F. Bernstein ’83
(1951 Nassau
Herald, photo enhancement by Steven Veach)
Simeon Moss
*49 during World War II, before he enrolled in graduate school at
Princeton. (COURTESY Jerry Crute)
Princeton’s newest crop of undergraduates — the Class of
2010, which will enter in the fall — could well include a record
number of minority students: According to the Prince, 37 percent
of students who accepted Princeton’s offer of admission have minority
backgrounds. Given the great effort spent on recruiting top candidates
from all ethnic groups, it may be startling to learn that the student
believed to be the University’s first regularly admitted black undergraduate
arrived only in the fall of 1947, just months after Jackie Robinson integrated
baseball. The name of that student, all but forgotten now, was Joseph
Ralph Moss ’51, though he endured the nickname “Peatmoss.”
To everyone who knew him well, he was just “Pete.”
Moss, who died in 1984, was a private person who had little contact
with his classmates after graduation; once-sharp memories of him have
dulled. He was a “townie,” born in Princeton in 1930. His
parents had moved north from Georgia around the time of World War I and
settled on Quarry Street in an integrated neighborhood. Moss’ father,
who died when he was 12, had an eighth-grade education and worked as a
servant for Professor Edward Corwin, the constitutional scholar. Moss’
mother, Mary, had graduated from what is now Paine College in Georgia
and worked for a local nursery school. She threw herself into community
affairs; a small park on John Street, just a few blocks from campus, is
named for her.
Though the neighborhood was integrated, the campus certainly was not.
There is some debate as to whether one or two freed slaves studied at
Princeton in the 18th century, but a color line was deeply drawn by the
time of the Civil War. While many northern colleges admitted black students,
albeit in small numbers, Princeton remained all-white at the undergraduate
level, a fact perhaps best characterized by its Southern president, Woodrow
Wilson 1879, who once advised a black prospective student that it would
be “altogether inadvisable for a colored man to enter” Princeton.
(Nevertheless, at least two black men received master’s degrees
from Princeton during Wilson’s tenure as a faculty member and as
University president.)
Wilson was succeeded as president by northerners, but still the color
bar remained for undergraduates. In 1920, Dartmouth’s president,
Ernest Martin Hopkins, summarized the state of racial enlightenment in
what would come to be known as the Ivy League this way: “There are
three attitudes among northern colleges which may be taken, one being
that of Princeton, in which the color line is drawn with the utmost rigidity
and the man is not even given access to the curriculum. ... The second
attitude is that of Yale, which gives colored men admission but where
it is definitely understood that the man shall be denied all the privileges
of membership in the college except that of attending classes and receiving
a diploma. The third attitude is that of Harvard, Dartmouth, Brown, Cornell,
and Pennsylvania, where the number of negroes who can qualify for admission
to the college is an insignificant number of the total enrollment, and
where the man who is enough an exception to the general standards of his
race so that he can qualify for college membership ... is neither given
less nor more consideration than he would have under other circumstances.”
For some Princeton students, World War II was a turning point, as The
Daily Princetonian published a series of front-page editorials in
1942 calling on the University to admit African-Americans. “While
the United States seeks to propagate ... confidence in America’s
promises of universal freedom without discrimination because of race,
color, or creed ... Princeton continues its principle of white supremacy,”
the students scolded. But although a poll showed that the faculty approved
of undergraduate integration by a 3-to-1 margin, only a bare majority
of the undergraduates did.
The decision to admit the first black undergraduates was made for Princeton
by the Navy, when in 1945 it sent four African-American officer candidates
to campus as part of the V-12 training program. Two years later, one of
them, John Leroy Howard ’47, became the first black student to earn
a Princeton bachelor’s degree. But no African-American had yet been
regularly admitted as an undergraduate by the University itself.
By the time Moss decided to apply to Princeton in 1947, the decision
to admit black students seems to have been made, as his personal admission
folder includes no discussion of his soon-to-be landmark status. Following
a campus interview, an admission officer wrote: “Saw this boy and
his mother, 2/20/47. Colored (light). A bit young-looking — pleasant.
Mother seems to be very high-grade.” Beneath these notes, someone
else wrote, “Give this boy every consideration. ... Will live at
home to save money.” At a time when the campus was overwhelmed with
returning servicemen and dorm space was sometimes scarce, it was not uncommon
for students to live off-campus. But the expectation that Moss would not
mix with white students in the dormitories, coupled with his light skin,
may have made him a less obtrusive, and hence a more attractive, candidate.
The admission officer noted that Moss’ older brother, Simeon,
was a student in Princeton’s graduate school — believed to
be one of the first African-American graduate students in 40 years. (In
a 1997 interview for an oral history project at Rutgers University, Simeon
Moss *49 recalled his own admission to Princeton, under the G.I. Bill:
“At that time, Princeton wasn’t too good about admitting blacks,
either at the graduate level or at the undergraduate level, so I said,
‘I’m gonna try ’em out.’ I called them, I sent
the stuff in, and the dean called me up a couple days later and said,
‘When do you want to start?’ So then I had to.”)
Joseph Ralph Moss, responding to a question on the admission application
asking why he wanted to attend Princeton, wrote: “The fact that
Princeton is one of the outstanding universities of the country and is
located in my hometown is my reason for selecting Princeton as my college.
I am sure that I shall be well qualified to secure employment in my field
when I have completed a course at Princeton.” His high school principal
noted that Moss was a good student, though “his father is dead and
he has to work after school to aid the family financially.” He was
“well-behaved and scholarly.” Asked on the recommendation
form whether he had confidence in Moss’ integrity, the principal
answered: “Entirely so.”
What changed Princeton’s policy on the admission of African-Americans
— whether it was the altered nature of the postwar world, the precedent
set by the V-12 students, or the simple untenability of its color line
— is unclear. Minutes of Princeton’s admission committee from
that era were damaged in a flood, and so the record is incomplete. A note
in the December 1946 records suggests that officials were concerned about
changes in state antidiscrimination laws. Then, in February 1948, the
dean of admission reported on the outcome: He “spoke about the antidiscrimination
laws covering college admission in New Jersey and pointed out the difficulties
which these might cause the Committee on Admission.” (The New Jersey
State Constitution was rewritten in 1947 and, for the first time, prohibited
discrimination because of race, color, ancestry, or national origin.)
In a time before identity politics, Moss did not deliberately draw attention
to himself as black. No one who knew Moss recalls any racial incidents
— slights, passing remarks, or harassment — during his undergraduate
years. Simeon Moss also does not recall any incidents directed either
at his brother or himself, which he attributes to the large number of
returning servicemen on campus, many of whom had seen more of life. “There
was,” he says, “an egalitarian spirit at Princeton [then],
despite what the newspapers said.”
According to Bob Brush ’51, the only flak Moss ever spoke of receiving
came from some of his friends in town, who accused him of putting on airs
by attending the University and trying to pass for white — a charge
that Moss’ classmates discount. “He was a man who could pass,
but he never played any games like that,” says Gus Brothman ’51.
“He was who he was.”
Like many undergraduates, Moss participated in extracurricular activities
— singing in the chapel choir and managing the freshman crew —
but otherwise he stayed on the fringes of campus life. Occasionally, he
served as substitute organist at a local Presbyterian church. In addition
to the modest financial aid he received from the University ($300 per
semester — half the total tuition in his freshman year), Moss worked
part-time in the library and during the summers as a waiter at a camp.
Moss’ haven seems to have been his eating club. Prospect Club
was founded in 1941 as a place for those who rejected the University’s
more established eating clubs — or were rejected by them —
or just wanted a cheaper place at which to take their meals.
“It was a haven for malcontents,” recalls Bill Davis ’51.
“If you felt you were on the fringe at Princeton in those days,
you’d find a welcome home at Prospect.” The club often held
lively backyard volleyball games, which few remember Moss joining. After
dinner, though, he would frequently join those gathered around the club’s
TV set, one of the very early models, and watch John Cameron Swayze, Milton
Berle, and the popular puppet show, Kukla, Fran, and Ollie.
He became Prospect’s steward and, by virtue of being a club officer,
was allowed to live there. His duties consisted of ordering the club’s
groceries and serving as a liaison with its two hired cooks, both black.
Friends recall some disputes when Moss, who was responsible for controlling
costs, would remove a particular item from the menu and then have to withstand
lobbying to have it reinstated.
Davis recalls Moss in these disputes as “quiet and firm. He was
not fierce, but opinionated. When he decided something, that was it.”
“I think he was a very private person,” adds Ed Woolley
’51, Prospect’s president during Moss’ senior year,
speculating that this may have been a defense mechanism to avoid drawing
attention to himself in a somewhat alien setting.
Simeon Moss speaks similarly, recalling his brother as “quiet
and sometimes kind of aloof. To my knowledge, he had a minimum of friends,
though he was very close to the friends he had. He wasn’t a loner-type,
but he stayed to himself quite a bit.” He was not a particularly
distinguished scholar, though he achieved his goal of majoring in foreign
languages and wrote his thesis on “Lamartine, Victor Hugo, Sainte-Beuve,
and Nature Poetry.”
After graduation, Moss and a group of Prospect friends drove west, stopping
in Ohio and Colorado on their way to San Francisco. Though Simeon Moss
says that his brother “was always very positive about everything
he had to say about Princeton,” that was to be the last time most
of his classmates saw him. Details about the remainder of Moss’
life come from Simeon.
He joined the Army during the Korean War, attended Officer Candidate
School, and served overseas. He never married, but settled in California,
where he taught foreign languages at a public high school in the Los Angeles
suburbs and for many summers led groups of students to France. At one
point, he also owned two laundromats, after taking a course in how to
repair the machines. His admission was not a harbinger for Princeton,
which continued to admit only a tiny number of blacks until the 1960s.
But the Mosses went on to become a multigenerational Princeton family,
and a distinguished one at that. Simeon, a Rutgers graduate who received
his Princeton master’s degree in history and a Silver Star for gallantry
during World War II, became a leader in Princeton community affairs and
helped organize the Princeton delegation to the March on Washington in
1963. He became an educator and public official, serving as New Jersey’s
assistant commissioner of labor, as a top administrator in the Newark
school district, and as the state’s first black county superintendent
of schools, in West Essex. His daughter, Deborah, graduated from Princeton
in 1987 and became a lawyer.
In a 1997 interview for a Rutgers oral history project, Moss speaks
proudly of both his children (his son, Simeon Jr., went to Cornell) and
recalls the family chain of Princeton alumni. “I was proud that
[Deborah] went to Princeton because my brother had gone to Princeton years
ago, too,” he told the Rutgers interviewers. “And he always
talked about her succeeding him.”
Joseph Ralph Moss died of cancer in 1984 at the age of 54; his classmates
don’t recall ever seeing him at Reunions or other campus events.
His death was reported to Princeton by a colleague at work. A memorial
did not appear in PAW until three years after his death.