Home / Full timeline / Four Black demonstrators protesting the dismissal of Norward Roussell as the first Black superintendent of Selma, Alabama’s schools, are arrested after a melee in the mayor’s office.
Four Black demonstrators protesting the dismissal of Norward Roussell as the first Black superintendent of Selma, Alabama’s schools, are arrested after a melee in the mayor’s office.
1990 (Feb 4 - 7)
Four Black protesters were arrested after a melee in the mayor's office in Selma, Alabama, on February 4. The Blacks were protesting the earlier dismissal of Norward Roussell as the first Black superintendent of the city's schools. The Selma Board of Education had said that Roussell's managerial skills were questionable. Among those arrested on February 4 were, Rose Sanders and Carlos Williams, local attorneys, and Perry Varner, a Dallas County commissioner. On February 6, the Selma Board of Education offered to rehire Superintendent Roussell at least temporarily and asked the five Black members of the board to return to their posts. The five Blacks had resigned in December 1989 after a racially divided school board voted against extending Roussell's contract. F. D. Reese, the Black high school principal who had been named interim school superintendent on February 4, said he would relinquish the job to Roussell. On February 7, despite the temporary reinstatement of Roussell as superintendent of Selma's schools, hundreds of demonstrators protested at City Hall. They demanded a permanent reinstatement for Roussell and charged that Rose Sanders, an attorney arrested in a previous protest on February 4, had been brutalized by police. Meanwhile, the town's schools, which were 70 percent Black, remained closed. Since December 1989, when the six white school board members rebuffed the five Black ones and voted to oust Roussell as superintendent, Black students had also boycotted several of the city's schools.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.