In last week’s
column I wrote about Federal District Court Judge Waites Waring and his efforts
to bring justice to African-American teachers and students in South Carolina
from the 1940s to the 1960s.
The
book set me to thinking about the history I remember from that era as the South
dealt with the Supreme Court’s mandate to desegregate schools. That mandate
took decades to take full effect, and some would say that racial segregation
still exists in public schools.
When
my classmates and I entered the N.C. public school system in 1955, we did not
think there was anything unusual in the existence of some public schools being
designated for white children and some being designated for black children. It was
simply how the world existed. But in 1954 the Supreme Court had found school
segregation to be unconstitutional, and gradual movements toward desegregation
began (not with the court’s requirement for “all deliberate speed”). I was in
high school, in a consolidated, countywide high school, when African-American
students and teachers first appeared in my classrooms.
Southerners
determined to keep school segregation in place declared “massive resistance” to
any effort to force full integration. Anson County, where I grew up, saw a
mandate to make schools for black students better, at least on a par with the
white schools, so county officials built a new, consolidated black high school
that was to open the year after I graduated from the white high school that was
only six years old. Federal officials declared the two segregated high schools
illegal. Local officials countered with a plan to send all male students to one
high school and all girls to the other school. The feds rejected that plan,
too, and my younger sister graduated from the new, fully integrated high
school.
When
my family moved to Wilson in 1980, we were impressed with the desegregation
solution that was in place here. Former white schools were paired with former
black schools so that all students, black and white, would spend four years in
their “home school” and then be bused to the paired school outside their
racially identifiable neighborhoods.
This
plan gave Wilson a great advantage compared to neighboring Nash and Wayne
counties, which still had separate city and county school systems with obvious
racial imbalances. Wilson County, thanks to young attorney Jim Hunt and others,
had merged city and county schools in the 1970s. This single system made Wilson
more attractive for industry.
Wilson’s
desegregation solution did not last very long. Changing residential patterns
created school populations with large black majorities in several schools.
A
50-member citizen task force was ordered to come up with a new, practical and
federally acceptable integration plan. The task force worked hard for two
years, trying to find a way to evenly balance racial populations in all
schools. In a county with a few densely populated areas and some very rural
areas, it was extremely difficult to bring about the preferred balance at all
schools. Then the Board of Education threw out both plans the task force had recommended.
Meanwhile, the federal court that had been overseeing the school system’s
compliance with integration law decided the system had attained “unitary”
status and ended its oversight.
When
the school board adopted a new neighborhood-based school attendance plan, some
black members of the board voted for the plan, even though the plan made no
effort to racially balance school populations. Most parents, black and white,
have quietly accepted the neighborhood plan.
The
latest concern for public schools and their students is competition from
private and charter schools, as well as home schools. Public school systems are
losing students and money to the new options, as this newspaper has reported.
Change is nothing new for school systems that have been reforming for more than
70 years.
This column first appeared in The Wilson Times.
Hal Tarleton was managing editor, editor
and opinion editor of The Wilson Daily Times for 29 years. Contact him at
haltarleton@myglnc.com.
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