Les anglonautes

About | Search | Vocapedia | Learning | Podcasts | Videos | History | Arts | Science | Translate

 Previous Home Up Next

 

History > USA > Civil rights > School desegregation

 

1950s-1960s

 

Clinton high school, Tennessee    1958-1960
 

 

 

 

Clinton High School in 1960.

 

A court order to desegregate the Tennessee school four years earlier

prompted violent protests that Rachel Louise Martin documents

in a new book.

 

Photograph: Sam Falk

The New York Times

 

How School Integration Upended a ‘Most Tolerant Little Town’

Clinton, Tenn., tried to desegregate its high school in 1956,

one year before Little Rock. It didn’t go well.

NYT

June 13, 2023    5:00 a.m. ET

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/13/
books/review/most-tolerant-little-town-rachel-louise-martin.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“Even though Clinton was segregated,”

one former student tells Martin,

“it was still one of the most tolerant little towns.”

 

Photograph: Sam Falk

The New York Times

 

How School Integration Upended a ‘Most Tolerant Little Town’

Clinton, Tenn., tried to desegregate its high school in 1956,

one year before Little Rock. It didn’t go well.

NYT

June 13, 2023    5:00 a.m. ET

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/13/
books/review/most-tolerant-little-town-rachel-louise-martin.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1956 - 1958

 

Clinton, Tenn.,

tried to desegregate

its high school in 1956,

one year before Little Rock.

It didn’t go well.

(...)

 

The road to this devastation

began with Wynona McSwain,

a resident of Clinton’s

Black neighborhood,

Freedman’s Hill.

 

In 1950,

one of McSwain’s daughters

joined four other Black teenagers

in trying to register

at Clinton High School

rather than continuing

to travel miles away

to a sorely underfunded

all-Black high school.

 

When the students were refused,

McSwain took their cause

to the N.A.A.C.P.’s office

in Knoxville.

 

At the same time

that a bundle

of school-desegregation cases

were making their way

to the Supreme Court

under the umbrella title

Brown v. Board of Education,

the Clinton litigants

pursued justice

through federal district

and appellate courts.

 

After the Brown decision, in 1954,

a judge ordered Clinton High School

to desegregate,

and the principal and mayor reluctantly

decided there was no point to defiance.

 

So, on a Monday morning

in August 1956,

a year before the Little Rock crisis,

12 Black students

walked toward Clinton High

to be educated

with about 800 white classmates.

 

As Martin astutely shows,

the terrorism to come

was not preordained.

 

“Even though

Clinton was segregated,”

one former student tells Martin,

“it was still one

of the most tolerant little towns.”

 

It sits amid the Cumberland Mountains,

which meant the plantation economy

and its system of mass enslavement

had never taken hold.

 

During the 1950s,

when the desegregation mandate

arrived,

Clinton’s people enjoyed stable

working- and middle-class lives,

with ample jobs in coal mines,

at a knitting mill

and at the nearby Oak Ridge

National Laboratory.

 

The 500 residents of Freedman’s Hill

built their own institutions,

including two churches

and an elementary school,

and managed interaction

with the town’s white majority

without inordinate rancor.

 

Race relations in Clinton,

in other words,

were not condemned in advance

by history,

and there were not two sets

of have-nots fighting

over a shrinking pie.

 

Indeed,

in the early hours

of that first day of school,

some townspeople saw

the prospect of success.

 

While a few dozen picketers,

far fewer than expected,

protested

the entry of the Black students,

the white teachers and pupils

inside the school doors

seemed warily welcoming.

 

“If we can get

through the first two weeks,”

the principal, D.J. Brittain Jr.,

told a teacher, “we’ll be all right.”

 

The calm, in fact,

lasted barely a few hours.

 

White protesters threw a bottle

at one Black woman,

and knocked another to the ground.

 

A fireman spotted a knife left

on the sidewalk outside the school.

 

That night,

hundreds of residents

gathered for the first

of many anti-integration rallies.

 

Brittain received a series

of hangup phone calls at home,

an ominous warning.

 

The battle escalated

over the school year.

 

It tested

the stoic persistence of Black families

and a few whites like Brittain

against the unceasing attacks

from an ever-growing

and increasingly martial

number of racist vigilantes.

 

While the segregationists

featured a few lurid,

cartoonish villains

— a transplanted neo-Nazi

from New York named John Kasper

and the future George Wallace

speechwriter Asa Carter —

Martin incisively undermines

the illusion that good,

decent white folks

kept their distance.

 

The 15 people arrested

on charges of intimidation and assault,

prompted by the beating

of a racially moderate white minister

named Paul Turner,

included a carpenter,

car dealer, firefighter,

utilities worker

and former deputy sheriff,

hardly the rabble

that the press reassuringly

made them out to be.

 

“The reporters coming to town

were talking about

the radicalized shenanigans

of the white men and boys,”

Martin observes,

“but Clinton’s

segregationist movement

had white women

at the core of it.

 

… They were working

alongside the white men

as provocateurs and organizers

and protesters and assailants.”

 

In the end,

only two of the initial 12 Black students

endured through to graduation.

 

One, Bobby Cain,

was so traumatized that, years later,

he could barely recall

the details of his torment.

 

Both Brittain and Turner

ultimately died by suicide.

 

And segregationists blew up

Clinton High in 1958

with an estimated 100 sticks

of dynamite.

 

(Contributions from around the nation

helped rebuild the school by 1960.)

 

Despite a three-year investigation,

nobody was ever charged

with the crime.

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/13/
books/review/most-tolerant-little-town-rachel-louise-martin.html

 

 

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/13/
books/review/most-tolerant-little-town-rachel-louise-martin.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Related > Anglonautes > History > 20th century > USA

 

School desegregation    1950s-1960s

 

 

Civil rights

 

 

 

 

 

Related > Anglonautes > History

 

17th, 18th, 19th, 20th century

English America, America, USA

Racism, Slavery,

Abolition, Civil war,

Abraham Lincoln,

Reconstruction

 

 

17th, 18th, 19th century

English America, America, USA

 

 

 

 

 

United Kingdom > Slavery

 

 

 

 

 

Related > Anglonautes > Vocapedia

 

U.S. Constitution > High Court / U.S. Supreme Court

Justices > Thurgood Marshall    1908-1993

 

 

U.S. Constitution, U.S. Supreme Court

 

 

slavery, eugenics,

race relations,

racial divide, racism,

segregation, civil rights,

apartheid

 

 

 

 

Anglonautes > Arts > Photographers >

20th century > USA > Civil rights

 

Jeffrey Henson Scales

 

 

Doy Gorton

 

 

Danny Lyon

 

 

Doris Derby    1939-2022

 

 

Steve Schapiro    1934-2022

 

 

Fred Baldwin    1929-2021

 

 

Matt Herron    1931-2020

 

 

Don Hogan Charles    1938-2017

 

 

Robert Adelman    1930-2016

 

 

Ernest C. Withers    1922-2007

 

 

Leonard Freed    1929-2006

 

 

Gordon Parks    1912-2006

 

 

James "Spider" Martin    1939-2003

 

 

Grey Villet    1927-2000

 

 

Ed Clark    1911-2000

 

 

Ralph Waldo Ellison    1913-1994

 

 

Robert W. Kelley    1920-1991

 

 

Weegee    1899-1968

 

 

 

home Up