Public schools in New Orleans, Louisiana, were desegregated to a significant degree for a period of almost seven years during the Reconstruction Era following the Civil War of the United States. Desegregation of this scale was not seen again in the Southern United States until after the 1954 federal court ruling Brown v. Board of Education established that segregated facilities were unconstitutional. There had previously been attempts by the free black community to integrate schools in New Orleans in 1862, following its Union occupation during the Civil War.
The 1867 Louisiana constitution, with its provision that racial segregation was no longer to be permitted in public facilities, marked the beginning of three years of legal wrangling and evasion by whites resistant to the idea of integrated schools. A court decision on school desegregation in December 1870 was acknowledged by organizers on both sides of the issue to be a decisive one, and integration of New Orleans's public schools began in earnest in 1870.
Although initially there was much vocal white opposition to integrated schools, and the mass media predicted the collapse of the public school system in New Orleans, ultimately, enrollment increased, and the performance of both black and white students improved in desegregated schools during the brief period when these institutions were allowed to flourish. At the height of the trend, approximately one-third of public schools in New Orleans were desegregated to a significant degree, and these schools were the top-performing schools in their districts.
There continued to be white opposition to the idea of desegregated schools despite their success. Opponents of interracial cooperation used varied tactics, from newspaper editorials to political posturing to violence, to express their point of view. In mid-1874, a congressional civil rights bill removed from the constitution the clause of desegregated schools, thus weakening the position of New Orleans's burgeoning desegregated public school system.
The Louisiana constitution was rewritten in 1879 to once again allow for segregated public institutions. In 1898, another change banned desegregated public facilities altogether.
See also
- New Orleans school desegregation crisis
- Ruby Bridges
- Bibliography of the Reconstruction Era#Louisiana
References
- ^ Louis R. Harlan, “Desegregation in New Orleans Public Schools During Reconstruction,” The American Historical Review 67 (Apr., 1962). doi:10.2307/1844107
- Fischer, Roger A. (1974). The Segregation Struggle in Louisiana, 1862-77. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 0252003942. LCCN 74007230.
- ^ Dale A. Somers, "Black and White in New Orleans: A Study in Urban Race Relations, 1865-1900," The Journal of Southern History 40(Feb., 1974): 23-24.
- Howard A. White, The Freedmen's Bureau in Louisiana (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1970), 193.