Home / Full timeline / Federal District Judge L. C. Morton approves a cross-town busing plan designed to desegregate the Nashville-Davidson county public school system in Tennessee.
Federal District Judge L. C. Morton approves a cross-town busing plan designed to desegregate the Nashville-Davidson county public school system in Tennessee.
1971 (Jun 28 - Jul 8)
Court action and out-of-court settlements continued in an effort to desegregate the nation's schools. On June 28, a federal district judge in Nashville, Tennessee, approved a cross-town busing plan designed to desegregate the Nashville-Davidson County public school system. Judge L. C. Morton adopted, with modifications, a plan drawn up by the department of Health, Education, and Welfare (HEW) which required the daily busing of about 47,000 students, an increase of approximately 13,500 over those bused in 1970-71. The number of Black children required to ride buses would almost double while the number of whites to be transported would increase by only one-third. The Nashville-Davidson county school system had an enrollment of about 95,000 pupils. Judge Morton ordered the plan implemented in September 1971. On July 8, the NAACP's Legal Defense Fund and the Mobile, Alabama, school board agreed upon a school desegregation plan that would allow at least ten of Mobile's public schools to retain virtually all-Black student bodies until the fall of 1972. Attorneys for the Blacks said they accepted the school board's suggested course of action only to avoid another year of litigation before a federal district judge they regarded as hostile to desegregation.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.