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Violent racial clashes occur over school desegregation.
1970 (Oct 5 - Nov 8)
Violent racial clashes connected with school desegregation occurred in three cities in the North and South. Four white boys and one Black youth were shot and wounded in two apparently related incidents on October 5th and 7th outside a desegregated high school in Pontiac, Michigan. A second Black student was struck down by a car near Pontiac Central High School on October 7th as white and Black students continued in their two-day battle with rocks and bottles. Tensions had run high in Pontiac following a recent court decision ordering desegregation of Pontiac's public schools. Public schools in Trenton, New Jersey, were closed October 29th and 30th, due to racial disorders that were sparked by the school board's decision to implement a student busing plan that called for the cross-town busing of fifty-five Black and one hundred white students to achieve racial balance. The trouble started on October 29th when fighting began between one hundred Black and white students in a predominantly Italian section of the city. Fighting spread into the downtown area when bands of Black youths surged into the district hurling bottles at police officers and breaking windows. More than two hundred people were arrested during the three days of disorder. On November 1, the board voted to reopen the schools, and the dusk-to-dawn curfew that had been imposed on the city was relaxed. Blacks in Henderson, North Carolina, had been engaged in a long protest over a decision by school officials to reopen an all-Black school in the community. They charged that the board of education was trying to evade desegregation by reopening the school. Four days of sporadic sniper fire and burnings erupted in Henderson in the aftermath of the dispute. The National Guard was called to help restore order, and police jailed 101 people between November 5th and 8th. By November 9th, the school board agreed to close the school and bus its Black pupils to desegregated schools. The National Guard remained on duty.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.