Remember that Brown v. Board was in 1954. Memphis did not integrate its first
schools until 1961 with thirteen first graders—now known as the Memphis 13. The
Board of Education’s subsequent plans for integration did not demonstrate to
the courts that integration would be completed in a timely and effective
manner, so Plans A and Z were adopted. The plans utilized busing to bring
students from their original neighborhoods to a paired school where the
majority of students were of a different race. Community reactions to these
plans were far from positive and caused lasting effects on both the Memphis
City School District, and the city as a whole.
Economic strains, racism, and classism
were all at the heart of anti-busing sentiments within the community. The city
of Memphis did not own any school buses at this time—all schools were
neighborhood schools and within walking distance. The cost to obtain them was
estimated at $1.5 million. Busing also inflated the annual transportation costs
to more than ten times its previous number from $51,000 to $524,000. Community
organizations, such as Citizens Against Busing (CAB) and Frayser Against Busing
(FAB) were created to protest the busing plan. Another popular response was white
flight. By January of 1973—when Plan A began—more than 17,000 white students
had left the district. By 1978, 40,000 white students had fled to the
predominantly white suburbs of Shelby County.
Another
alternative to integration was attending private schools. By the time busing
plans went into effect, two-dozen new schools had been created and private
school enrollment had increased by 14,000. These schools were seen as a refuge
for white flight—being able to admit a token Black student, or none at all—and
many did not even meet state regulations for education and were later
closed. Reactions
to busing shaped the demography of race and class in the Memphis Public
Education System. Students left in the public schools were generally black,
poor, or both.
These reactions to
busing shaped the demography of race and class in Memphis City Schools. During
the era of desegregation, there was the unfortunate—and incorrect view—that
because schools were attended and run by African Americans those schools were
worse than their white counterparts. Traditionally underfunded since their
conception, African American schools generally had older textbooks and poorly
built facilities. Such impressions lasted through the decades—even in the past
five years where this discourse was particularly evident in the school district
merger. In Shelby County Schools—the current school district that houses the
schools of the city of Memphis—76.7 percent of students are African American
and only 7.5 percent White. 75.7 percent of Shelby County Schools students are
economically disadvantaged.
Sources:
Marcus Pohlmann, Opportunity Lost: Race and Poverty in the Memphis City Schools
(Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 2010).
http://www.scsk12.org/uf/webadmin/foundation/about/
I find this to be very interesting, as a Memphian I enjoy getting to learn about its history and observe the past. Having said that, I learned about this matter in sixth grade. When I did hear about it, I was shocked; however, it is so rare that classes talk about the matter of race in the classroom - let alone in a class, it tends to be more people coming to talk about its importance rather than historically associating it's roots to our hometown. Busing allowed for a large majority of white people to create an exclusionary fantasy of their own. They systematically removed themselves from the mainstream of American life to be away from someone that is of a different race. The notions surrounding the actions of these individuals is what was so appalling to me. I can not help but compare it to the context in which we live - I just find it hard to believe people were willing to change their everyday life to be away from individuals of different race. Needless to say, this is a very interesting post.
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