Home / Full timeline / Alonzo A. Crim becomes the first Black superintendent of the public schools in Atlanta, Georgia, as a result of a controversial agreement.
Alonzo A. Crim becomes the first Black superintendent of the public schools in Atlanta, Georgia, as a result of a controversial agreement.
1973 (Jul 1)
Alonzo A. Crim, former superintendent of schools in Compton, California, assumed his duties as the first Black superintendent of the public schools in Atlanta, Georgia, one of the Deep South's largest predominantly Black school systems. Crim's selection resulted from a compromise desegregation plan worked out between local Black and white business and political leaders in which the Blacks agreed to desist from further pressures for busing to achieve desegregation and the whites agreed to the hiring of a Black superintendent and other Black school administrators. The plan, reminiscent of the famous Atlanta Compromise of 1895, in which Booker T. Washington urged Blacks to shun social equality for economic advancement, was denounced by the national NAACP leadership in New York. They felt the agreement set a bad precedent and would hamper future efforts to achieve massive desegregation of the nation's schools. Although local NAACP leaders who assented to the pact argued that massive desegregation was impossible in Atlanta, a city with a 55 percent Black population and an 80 percent Black school-age population, they were suspended and eventually expelled from office for their support of the desegregation agreement.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.