1. How Bean Became Loving


    Date: 9/1/2017, Categories: Fiction, First Time, Interracial, Romance, Author: Redlust, Rating: 80, Source: sexstories.com

    marry me?” She nodded again, tears appearing in her eyes. “You’ll be Mrs. Loving then?” He asked. “Yes, Richard Loving I will.” --End-- *** I had this next section about the real Richard and Mildred Loving and many of the readers didn’t care for it. I’m keeping it in anyway no need to read it if you don’t want to. * You may or may not know who Mildred and Richard Loving were in historical terms. Mildred and Richard Loving were married on June 2, 1958 in Washington D.C. where there weren’t anti-miscegenation laws. They went with Bean’s Father and one of her brothers as witnesses and returned to Central Point, Virginia. Virginia however not only had laws not allowing interracial marriage but also (unbeknownst to the Lovings) had made it a criminal offense to try to evade the laws by being married elsewhere. On June 11, the entirety of Caroline County’s police force, three officers, entered the Jeter residence where the couple were living temporarily attempting to catch them in coitus adding further to the charges. When the couple who were asleep pointed to the framed marriage certificate, the officers simply said “That’s no good here,” and placed the couple under arrest. They were charged with unlawful cohabitation: a white man and a colored woman. In January of the following year they were each sentenced to one year in prison, with the sentence suspended if they agreed to leave the state of Virginia for 25 years. They lived in Washington D.C. but they were not fans of city ...
    living. They were country folk and were distressed that their children didn’t get to see the home they loved. The likely final straw came when their son was hit by a car in the congested city. Mildred, desperate, wrote to Robert Kennedy (the Attorney General) for assistance. His office directed her to the American Civil Liberties Union who worked to have their ruling overturned; eventually succeeding on June 12, 1967. Loving v. Virginia became a seminal civil rights case where the Supreme Court unanimously ruled that anti-miscegenation laws were unconstitutional, ending race based marriage restrictions in the U.S., 10 days after the Lovings ninth anniversary. *** The Lovings were very private folks. They were never ones to relish the spotlight. In photos that the press took after the court’s decision its clear that all they wanted was to be left alone. Their “interview” was brief and unenlightening, meaning so many facts about them are murky. This story besides the scant facts that are known was made up out of whole cloth. The details of the beginnings of their relationship are fabrications. The real Lovings moved back to Central Point and were harassed by Racist groups. A cross was burned in front of he Jeter’s farmhouse and then their home not much later. When the couple was married just over 14 years (1975) a drunk driver crashed into their car killing Richard, blinding Bean in one eye and injuring her sister. The community that had shunned Mildred Loving before didn’t do so ...
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