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States in the north and west violently resist desegregation in public schools.
1971 (Aug 30 - Sep 8)
As the nation's schools reopened for their fall terms, the stiffest resistance to court-ordered racial desegregation in public education was seen in the north and west. In Pontiac, Michigan, eight white students and one Black pupil were injured on September 8 as fights erupted during protests against a school busing plan. On August 30, 1971, arsonists in Pontiac had set firebombs that destroyed ten school buses to be used for implementing desegregation plans. The protests in Pontiac were among the most violent seen in the country. White parents carrying American flags marched in front of the school bus depot on September 8, daring bus drivers to run them down. In San Francisco, Chinese-American spokesmen announced that they intended to resist a court-ordered busing plan scheduled to be implemented on September 13, 1971. The Chinese Americans acted in response to Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas's rejection of their anti-busing appeal on August 29, 1971. Under the plan, upheld by the courts, approximately 6,500 Chinese Americans were to be included among 48,000 students to be bused in order to achieve further school desegregation. In Boston, Massachusetts, parents of about three hundred children who were assigned to a new racially desegregated school refused to enroll their children there on September 8. Instead, the children were returned to their previous neighborhood schools. A similar defiance of court-ordered desegregation occurred in Evansville, Indiana. By contrast, most newly desegregated schools reopened quietly in the South, although many were faced with new busing plans.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.