Home / Full timeline / Students dissatisfied with the leadership of Rust College president, W.A. McMillan, demonstrate.
Students dissatisfied with the leadership of Rust College president, W.A. McMillan, demonstrate.
1977 (Mar 31 - Apr 18)
On March 31, Rust College, a Black school in Holly Springs, Mississippi, was closed and all of its eight hundred students were ordered off campus following a demonstration and fire on campus. The fire, of unknown origins, caused an estimated $500,000 damage to the college's administration building. Students blamed the school's president W.A. McMillan for the disturbance. Some said that he exercised "strict discipline," had failed to communicate with them, had alienated them, and "forced them to action." George Dupont, a sophomore student, called the president “a stubborn dictator, deceitful, unreaching. We want him out. ... He runs this place like a penal institution." The damaged building, a replica of Independence Hall in Philadelphia, was constructed on the small, church-related liberal arts campus in 1947. On April 18, Rust College reopened to students and faculty. In a statement, W.A. McMillan, who had been asked by twenty of his faculty members to resign, stated: “I am disappointed, but not discouraged. Rust has a heritage that a disruption or a fire cannot destroy. We will heal our wounds and get to the business of making Christian higher education better than ever at Rust College."
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.