Home / Full timeline / John S. Martin, superintendent of public schools in Jackson, Mississippi, resigned because of the pressures of school desegregation by the federal courts. A mass resignation occurs during this two-year period.
John S. Martin, superintendent of public schools in Jackson, Mississippi, resigned because of the pressures of school desegregation by the federal courts. A mass resignation occurs during this two-year period.
1970 (Aug 31)
John S. Martin, superintendent of public schools in Jackson, Mississippi, resigned, citing the federal courts and the pressure of school desegregation as reasons. According to the New York Times, Martin joined at least two hundred other school superintendents in the South who had resigned in the past two years because of the problems resulting from desegregation in their districts. William Dunn, superintendent of schools in Louisiana, predicted the federal government's latest attempt to desegregate schools in the South would lead to a wave of resignations from experienced educators. The rate of turnover among superintendents in Alabama, Louisiana, and Georgia since 1968 was nearly forty percent - almost double the rate in any previous two-year period. Louisiana led the South in the rate of turnovers. In two years, there had been thirty-nine turnovers among the sixty-six district superintendents.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.