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Violence erupts at an Alabama high school as racial tension escalates.
1989 (Oct 11 - 12)
The principal and a student of Minor High School in Adamsville, Alabama, were stabbed during a fight between Black and white students. Principal Judson Jones, who received a two-inch knife wound to his stomach in the altercation, said tensions had escalated for several days, with several fights between Blacks and whites in the previous week. In an effort to bring peace, he had called for additional police officers to patrol the grounds of the school and ordered all Black students into the cafeteria and all whites into the gymnasium as they entered the school on October 11. But when Jones took a group of white students to the cafeteria to meet with the Blacks, a fight erupted that quickly spread to other areas of the building. Seven students were arrested at the school on October 11 on charges ranging from disorderly conduct to attempted murder. On October 12, two additional students were incarcerated on charges of possessing alcohol and weapons. William James, a Black senior at Minor High School, told newspaper reporters that the school's problems were not new. "There's always been racial trouble here.... They didn't want us here anyway." These racial disturbances in Alabama were a part of the growing number of such encounters on high school and college campuses throughout the year.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.