TODAY IN HISTORY
Under escort from the U.S. Army’s 101st Airborne Division, nine
black students enter all-white Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas.
Three weeks earlier, Arkansas Governor Orval Faubus had surrounded the school
with National Guard troops to prevent its federal court-ordered racial
integration. After a tense standoff, President Dwight D. Eisenhower federalized
the Arkansas National Guard and sent 1,000 army paratroopers to Little Rock to
enforce the court order.
On May 17, 1954, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled unanimously in Brown
v. Board of Education of Topeka that racial segregation in educational
facilities was unconstitutional. Five days later, the Little Rock School Board
issued a statement saying it would comply with the decision when the Supreme Court
outlined the method and time frame in which desegregation should be
implemented.
Arkansas was at the time among the more progressive Southern
states in regard to racial issues. The University of Arkansas School of Law was
integrated in 1949, and the Little Rock Public Library in 1951. Even before the
Supreme Court ordered integration to proceed “with all deliberate speed,” the
Little Rock School Board in 1955 unanimously adopted a plan of integration to
begin in 1957 at the high school level. The National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) filed suit, arguing the plan was too
gradual, but a federal judge dismissed the suit, saying that the school board
was acting in “utmost good faith.” Meanwhile, Little Rock’s public buses were desegregated.
By 1957, seven out of Arkansas’ eight state universities were integrated.
In the spring of 1957, there were 517 black students who lived
in the Central High School district. Eighty expressed an interest in attending
Central in the fall, and they were interviewed by the Little Rock School Board,
which narrowed down the number of candidates to 17. Eight of those students
later decided to remain at all-black Horace Mann High School, leaving the
“Little Rock Nine” to forge their way into Little Rock’s premier high school.
In August 1957, the newly formed Mother’s League of Central High
School won a temporary injunction from the county chancellor to block
integration of the school, charging that it “could lead to violence.” Federal
District Judge Ronald Davies nullified the injunction on August 30. On
September 2, Governor Orval Faubus—a staunch segregationist—called out the
Arkansas National Guard to surround Central High School and prevent
integration, ostensibly to prevent the bloodshed he claimed desegregation would
cause. The next day, Judge Davies ordered integrated classes to begin on
September 4.
That morning, 100 armed National Guard troops encircled Central
High School. A mob of 400 white civilians gathered and turned ugly when the
black students began to arrive, shouting racial epithets and threatening the
teenagers with violence. The National Guard troops refused to let the black
students pass and used their clubs to control the crowd. One of the nine,
15-year-old Elizabeth Eckford, was surrounded by the mob, which threatened to
lynch her. She was finally led to safety by a sympathetic white woman.
Little Rock Mayor Woodrow Mann condemned Faubus’ decision to
call out the National Guard, but the governor defended his action, reiterating
that he did so to prevent violence. The governor also stated that integration
would occur in Little Rock when and if a majority of people chose to support
it. Faubus’ defiance of Judge Davies’ court order was the first major test of Brown
v. Board of Education and the biggest challenge of the federal government’s
authority over the states since the Reconstruction Era.
The standoff continued, and on September 20 Judge Davies ruled
that Faubus had used the troops to prevent integration, not to preserve law and
order as he claimed. Faubus had no choice but to withdraw the National Guard
troops. Authority over the explosive situation was put in the hands of the
Little Rock Police Department.
On September 23, as a mob of 1,000 whites milled around outside
Central High School, the nine black students managed to gain access to a side
door. However, the mob became unruly when it learned the black students were
inside, and the police evacuated them out of fear for their safety. That
evening, President Eisenhower issued a special proclamation calling for
opponents of the federal court order to “cease and desist.” On September 24,
Little Rock’s mayor sent a telegram to the president asking him to send troops
to maintain order and complete the integration process. Eisenhower immediately
federalized the Arkansas National Guard and approved the deployment of U.S.
troops to Little Rock. That evening, from the White House, the president
delivered a nationally televised address in which he explained that he had
taken the action to defend the rule of law and prevent “mob rule” and
“anarchy.” On September 25, the Little Rock Nine entered the school under
heavily armed guard.
Troops remained at Central High School throughout the school
year, but still the black students were subjected to verbal and physical
assaults from a faction of white students. Melba Patillo, one of the nine, had
acid thrown in her eyes, and Elizabeth Eckford was pushed down a flight of
stairs. The three male students in the group were subjected to more conventional
beatings. Minnijean Brown was suspended after dumping a bowl of chili over the
head of a taunting white student. She was later suspended for the rest of the
year after continuing to fight back. The other eight students consistently
turned the other cheek. On May 27, 1958, Ernest Green, the only senior in the
group, became the first black to graduate from Central High School.
Governor Faubus continued to fight the school board’s
integration plan, and in September 1958 he ordered Little Rock’s three high schools
closed rather than permit integration. Many Little Rock students lost a year of
education as the legal fight over desegregation continued. In 1959, a federal
court struck down Faubus’ school-closing law, and in August 1959 Little Rock’s
white high schools opened a month early with black students in attendance. All
grades in Little Rock public schools were finally integrated in 1972.
http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/central-high-school-integrated
http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/central-high-school-integrated
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