Home / Full timeline / The U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals orders complete desegregation in eighty-one southern school districts, mostly in Georgia. They had originally exempted these districts from full desegregation compliance on the grounds that it would produce educationally unsound school systems.
The U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals orders complete desegregation in eighty-one southern school districts, mostly in Georgia. They had originally exempted these districts from full desegregation compliance on the grounds that it would produce educationally unsound school systems.
1971 (Jun 17)
The U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals ordered complete desegregation in eighty-one southern school districts. The court reversed a U.S. District Court decision of April 22, 1970, which exempted some districts (mostly in Georgia) from full desegregation compliance on the grounds that such compliance would produce educationally unsound school systems. The Court of Appeals said that the district court must apply the Singleton decree to the eighty-one school districts in the areas of faculty and staff desegregation, school construction, site selection, and school attendance outside the system. The decree, issued in 1970 by the Fifth Circuit Court in the case of Singleton v. Jackson, required that the faculty of each school have approximately the same racial ratio as the entire school system, and that decisions regarding school construction and selection of school sites be made without evidence of racial discrimination. The New Orleans-based court also said the eighty-one school systems must comply with the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg, which held that busing could be used as a tool to dismantle a dual school system. The eighty-one school districts had been under federal court jurisdiction since December 1969. The latest appellate ruling in the case stemmed from the intervention by Charley Ridley, Jr., a Black student from Gray, Georgia, in the blanket desegregation suit filed against Georgia and the state's board of education in 1969.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.