Home / Full timeline / Governor George C. Wallace of Alabama refuses to desegregate schools, ordering two of his state’s school boards to ignore federal court-ordered desegregation plans.
Governor George C. Wallace of Alabama refuses to desegregate schools, ordering two of his state’s school boards to ignore federal court-ordered desegregation plans.
1971 (Aug 18)
Governor George C. Wallace of Alabama ordered two of his state's school boards to ignore federal court-ordered desegregation plans. Wallace directed the school boards in Calhoun County and the city of Oxford to disregard the orders of a federal judge that an all-Black school in Hobson City be paired with two predominantly white schools in Oxford. Governor Wallace contended that his actions were consistent with President Richard Nixon's anti-busing declaration of August 3. The governor's actions followed by only two days a declaration from Federal District Judge Sam C. Pointer, Jr., that such action was legally meaningless. Mississippi Governor John Bell Williams was one of those, however, who announced immediate support for Wallace's anti-desegregation tactics. Wallace, Williams said, had “drawn a line in the dust and I stand fully with him.”
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.