In this excerpt, Morton indicates that the most significant contribution of the Fellowship of Southern Churchmen was its pioneering work in integration efforts. For one, she explains that the Fellowship provided a network throughout the South where people sympathetic to the aims of the Fellowship could find safe harbor. Because of their work, Morton argues that they were able to provide opportunities for children to experience fully integrated activities. As evidence of this, she cites a yearly summer camp held at her family farm in Kingsport, Tennessee, with the aid of her father, as evidence of racial progress.