Home / Full timeline / More than two hundred school districts across the South reopened peacefully with desegregated classrooms. Despite the massive compliance, 175 other districts continue to hold out.
More than two hundred school districts across the South reopened peacefully with desegregated classrooms. Despite the massive compliance, 175 other districts continue to hold out.
1970 (Aug 31)
More than two hundred school districts across the South that had resisted the 1954 U.S. Supreme Court order that mandated segregation finally reopened peacefully with desegregated classrooms. Nearly 300,000 Black children from Virginia to Louisiana began classes with whites as threats of school boycotts by white parents failed to materialize. Despite the massive compliance, 175 other districts continued to hold out, most of which were involved in litigation on the issue of student busing. Others were involved in negotiations with government officials aimed at ending segregated school systems. Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, Warren E. Burger, announced that the court would consider the remaining school desegregation problems when the new court term began on October 12. Many Blacks and whites had raised questions concerning the legality of busing, the concept of racial balance, and the definition of a unitary school system.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.