In Norfolk, the hottest day of
the year in 1959 was June 27 when the temperature reached 100 degrees.
The coldest day of 1959
was January 6, with a low temperature of 19°F.
That year,
Norfolk was also named All-American city, just as the city was named an
All-American city for 2012. City officials celebrated this "super
bowl" status last month.
But some people in the Norfolk community
weren't celebrating the city's All-American status in 1959. They were too busy
fighting against the integration of schools or fighting for the integration of
schools. Or taking their white children from schools and placing them in
private schools, precipitating the "white flight" to the suburbs of
what eventually morphed into Virginia Beach.
Yet Norfolk
was named an All-American city in 1959.
Based on the
events of 1959, the judges must have been blind. Or they simply ignored the
momentous upheaval of the social, cultural and racial fabric of that year in
1959.
So this was
Norfolk, an All-American city, in 1959, according to a chronology of events.
On January 19, 1959, the Virginia Supreme
Court of Appeals struck down the linchpin of the Massive Resistance laws, the
one closing schools about to be integrated. Here, the decision plugs the barrel
of the cannon of Massive Resistance. Courtesy Richmond Times-Dispatch.
Accompanied
by their mothers, first-grader Mary Rose Foxworth and second-grader Daphne
Perminter became the first African American pupils at the previously all-white
Suburban Park School in Norfolk when they enrolled on September 8, 1959.
Courtesy Richmond Times-Dispatch.
January 13, 1959
Mayor Duckworth and the City
Council move to eliminate funding for all secondary schools, including all
black secondary schools. Roy Martin casts the only dissenting vote. The plan is
to cease all funding after February 1.
January 19, 1959
A three-judge federal court
rules in James v. Almond that the Virginia school-closing statute is
unconstitutional and illegal.
Also on this day, the Virginia
Supreme Court of Appeals made the same ruling in Harrison v. Day. The
state's constitution requires maintenance of an "efficient" school
system.
A second case is filed in state
court: Ruth Pendleton James, a minor, etc., et al. v. W. Fred Duckworth, et
al. to prevent closing all schools above the 6th grade. The daughter of
Ellis and Ruth James is the litigant in both James cases. Archie L. Boswell and
Edmund D. Campbell are the attorneys for the plaintiffs.
January 20, 1959
Governor Almond
denounces federal court rulings in a fiery speech.
January 21, 1959
CBS broadcasts
''The Lost Class of '59" with Edward R. Murrow, one of the nation's most
respected journalists. Unwanted national attention is brought to the Norfolk
school desegregation crisis. Margaret White, a teacher at Granby High School,
is among those interviewed for the program.
January 26, 1959
100 prominent
business leaders take out a full-page advertisement
in The Virginian-Pilot urging the reopening of the schools. While it
professed preference for segregation, it urged acceptance of the new reality.
January 29, 1959
A cross is burned
in front of Norview High School.
February 2, 1959
The six schools
reopen, and the 17 black students walk in. There are no federal troops, as in
Arkansas. Reporters outnumber police. "Racial slurs are thrown, but not
bricks." Massive resistance ends. The 17 students endure unspeakable discrimination
and abuse. Yet, their determination and courage pave the way for educational
opportunities for other African-American students.
February 5, 1959
Governor Almond appoints the Perrow Commission to make recommendations to
safeguard segregated schools in Virginia. Their report was submitted March 31,
1959.
1960
Governor Almond orders all
schools to integrate.
Yep, Norfolk is an All-American
city.
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