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Georgia’s Clayton County is sued for circumventing school integration.
1971 (Feb 5)
The Justice Department filed a suit in the U.S. District Court of Atlanta charging Georgia's Clayton County school board with maintaining a dual public school system. The Clayton system was described by the department as one of fifty remaining recalcitrant school districts in the south. According to the suit, Clayton officials assigned the district's 1,479 Black and 25,220 white pupils and their teachers to different sets of schools. The department requested a court order demanding that the county submit a desegregation plan immediately. Judge Oren Harris of the U.S. District Court for the eastern district of Arkansas issued an ultimatum to the officials of the Watson Chapel, Arkansas, school district No. 24, warning them that they faced stiff jail terms if they continued to defy a court-ordered desegregation ruling. Harris said a fine of $350 a day would also be levied for each day they remained in contempt of court by ignoring the school order. Watson Chapel district, which included part of Pine Bluff, Arkansas, as well as the town of Watson Chapel, had about 4,000 students, almost half of them Black. Judge Harris had ordered all children in grades one through four to attend three elementary schools, all of which would retain a substantial white majority. The Justice Department, also on February 5, charged the Henry County, Virginia, school district with failing to execute a desegregation arrangement that it had earlier agreed to implement. In a suit filed in the federal district court in Danville, Virginia, the department accused the Henry County system of continuing to assign its high school pupils on a freedom-of-choice plan in violation of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Henry County, according to the suit, had used the freedom-of-choice scheme to assign nearly 800 Black pupils to an all-Black high school.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.