Home / Full timeline / The Race Relations Information Center (RRIC), releases a report warning that predominantly Black public colleges were in “imminent danger of losing their identity through integration, merger, reduced status, or outright abolition.”
The Race Relations Information Center (RRIC), releases a report warning that predominantly Black public colleges were in “imminent danger of losing their identity through integration, merger, reduced status, or outright abolition.”
1971 (Jun 16)
The Race Relations Information Center (RRIC) of Nashville, Tennessee, announced that predominantly Black public colleges were in "imminent danger of losing their identity through integration, merger, reduced status, or outright abolition." In a report entitled "The Black Public Colleges-Integration and Disintegration," the RRIC said "the prevailing pattern is one of racially separate and qualitatively unequal higher education." The 1970-71 academic year marked the first time in their history that the nation's thirty-three state supported Black colleges enrolled more than 100,000 students. During the past decade, enrollment at the institutions increased 75 percent. The report said the figures suggested thriving institutions, but that in reality, the death knell of the Black state-supported colleges had already been sounded. There were originally thirty-five public colleges created for Blacks, two of which had become predominantly white. Those two, Maryland State College and West Virginia's Bluefield State College, were joined by two more, West Virginia State and Missouri's Lincoln University. The RRIC said three other institutions-Delaware State, Maryland's Bowie State, and Kentucky State-could soon follow suit. Of the twenty-six remaining schools, fourteen were in direct competition with a predominantly white college. The RRIC speculated that most of these would eventually lose their identity, perhaps even be completely abolished.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.