The Civil Rights Story: A Year’s Review (1964)

The Civil Rights Story: A Year’s Review (1964)

Creator Harry Fleischman
Description Issuance is a reprint from the American Jewish Year Book, Vol. 65, 1964. Harry Fleischmann is coordinator of race-relations activities and director of the National Labor Service of the American Jewish Committee. The pamphlet summarizes civil rights activities in multiple categories including the desegregation of schools. Virginia is mentioned pp. 13-14.
Call number Civil Rights no. 11
Date from 1964
Date to 1964
Geographic school United States
Size 1 pamphlet
Access restrictions yes/no no
Access restrictions
Part Of larger collection yes/no yes
Larger collection title
URL
Repository Virginia Tech Special Collections
Repository address University Libraries, P.O. Box 90001, Blacksburg, VA 24062-9001
Repository contact name Aaron D. Purcell
Repository contact title Director, Special Collections
Repository contact email specref@vt.edu
Repository contact phone (540) 231-6308
DoveRegion region1
Subjects o    African Americans–Civil rights

o    African Americans–Segregation

o    Private schools

o    Public schools

o    Race relations

o    School integration

o    Segregation in education

o    Virginia. Supreme Court of Appeals

Types Pamphlets

Minority Newsletter (Virginia Tech)

Minority Newsletter (Virginia Tech)

Creator Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Office
Description These two issues of the Minority Newsletter focus on the first black alumni reunion, the retention of minorities in engineering, general news of interest to minorities, an obituary for T. J. Anderson Jr., and an article by Dean of Students James W. Dean describing conditions and events during the initial integration of Virginia Tech and the town of Blacksburg.
Call number RG 2/12, Box 20, Folders 19-20
Date from 1987
Date to 1987
Geographic school Blacksburg, VA
Size 2 items
Access restrictions yes/no no
Access restrictions
Part Of larger collection yes/no yes
Larger collection title
URL
Repository Virginia Tech Special Collections
Repository address University Libraries, P.O. Box 90001, Blacksburg, VA 24062-9001
Repository contact name Tamara Kennelly
Repository contact title University Archivist
Repository contact email specref@vt.edu
Repository contact phone (540) 231-6308
DoveRegion region1
Subjects o    African American students

o    African Americans–Civil rights

o    Race relations

o    School integration

o    Segregation in higher education

Types o    Organizational Records

o    Pamphlets

Black Alumni Reunion 1999 (Virginia Tech)

Black Alumni 1999 (Virginia Tech)

Creator Virginia Tech Special Collections
Description Contains materials related to the 1999 Virginia Tech Black Alumni Reunion, including a questionnaire, schedule of events, list of participants (giving current address and year of graduation), two printed articles on Tech’s early black history, “Breaking the Double Barrier The First Black Women at Tech” and “The First Black Students at Virginia Tech,” and a Fall 1998 issue of Diversity News (a publication of Tech’s EOAA Office).
Call number RG 29/8
Date from 1998
Date to 1999
Geographic school Blacksburg, VA
Size 1 folder
Access restrictions yes/no no
Access restrictions
Part Of larger collection yes/no yes
Larger collection title
URL
Repository Virginia Tech Special Collections
Repository address University Libraries, P.O. Box 90001, Blacksburg, VA 24062-9001
Repository contact name Aaron D. Purcell
Repository contact title Director, Special Collections
Repository contact email specref@vt.edu
Repository contact phone (540) 231-6308
DoveRegion region1
Subjects o    African American students

o    Segregation in education

Types o    Maps

o    Memorabilia

Black Student Directory (Virginia Tech)

Black Student Directory (Virginia Tech)

Creator Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Office
Description The EO/AA Office began publishing a Black Student Directory in 1977. This edition contains a list of black organizations on campus, names and both campus address and hometown of undergraduate and graduate students, a list of students by major, and a list of black faculty and staff at Virginia Tech in 1986-87.
Call number RG 2/12, Box 20, Folder 19
Date from 1986
Date to 1987
Geographic school Blacksburg and elsewhere
Size 1 softbound 74 page booklet
Access restrictions yes/no no
Access restrictions
Part Of larger collection yes/no yes
Larger collection title
URL
Repository Virginia Tech Special Collections
Repository address University Libraries, P.O. Box 90001, Blacksburg, VA 24062-9001
Repository contact name Tamara Kennelly
Repository contact title University Archivist
Repository contact email specref@vt.edu
Repository contact phone (540) 231-6308
DoveRegion region1
Subjects o    African American students
Types o    Organizational Records

o    Pamphlets

Civil rights No. 2 (pamphlets) 

Civil rights No. 2 (pamphlets) 

Creator American Jewish Committee
Description Two pamphlets that summarize progress in civil rights in multiple areas, including education. The first pamphlet covers 1948 to 1959; the second pamphlet covers 1954 to 1963. Virginia is mentioned in several categories, including Education.
Call number Civil rights No. 2
Date from 1948
Date to 1963
Geographic school United States
Size 2 pamphlets
Access restrictions yes/no no
Access restrictions
Part Of larger collection yes/no yes
Larger collection title
URL
Repository Virginia Tech Special Collections
Repository address University Libraries, P.O. Box 90001, Blacksburg, VA 24062-9001
Repository contact name Aaron D. Purcell
Repository contact title Director, Special Collections
Repository contact email specref@vt.edu
Repository contact phone (540) 231-6308
DoveRegion region1
Subjects o    African Americans–Civil rights

o    African Americans–Segregation

o    Public schools

o    Race relations

o    Segregation in education

Types Pamphlets

The Defense of an Unconscionable Experimentation with Ignorance : The Legal Battle over Public Education in Prince Edward County, Virginia, 1959-1964 

The Defense of an Unconscionable Experimentation with Ignorance : The Legal Battle over Public Education in Prince Edward County, Virginia, 1959-1964 

Creator Lagerquist, Jonathan
Description Master’s thesis. From 1954 to 1964 the public schools in Prince Edward County, Virginia, remained closed. The schools had been closed to avoid complying with federal court orders requiring that the county desegregate its public schools. Segregation of public schools had been found unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in its 1954 landmark decision in Brown v. Board of Education. The Prince Edward public schools were closed for five years until the Supreme Court in 1964 found that the school closures were unconstitutional in Griffin v. County School Board of Prince Edward County. This Master s Thesis explores the legal battle that arose out the Prince Edward school closures. The purpose is to determine how the county was able to defend the closures during the lengthy litigation. The source material consists of briefs filed before the courts, where the involved parties present their arguments. These documents are found in the collection the Papers of Allan G. Donn, housed at the Special Collections and University Archives, Patricia W. and J. Douglas Perry Library, at Old Dominion University Libraries, Norfolk, Virginia. In addition, the several court rulings handed down during the litigation are examined. By analyzing this source material qualitatively, the litigation is reconstructed and analyzed. The Prince Edward school closures have received relatively little scholarly attention. The research that has been done on the Prince Edward school closures focuses on how proponents and opponents to the closures acted politically, in the public discourse, and on a grassroots level. This thesis will therefore explore an aspect of the closures that has heretofore been largely overlooked. In addition to casting light on a previously overlooked part of the Prince Edward school closures, this thesis also provides a new interpretation of the county s defense of the closures. Previous research has attributed the effectiveness of the county s strategy to keep the schools closed due to the lack of a constitutional requirement in regards to public education. While segregation in public schools had been found unconstitutional, public education nevertheless remained within the states purview. This study supports this claim, however it elaborates on how the involved parties and courts tasked with ruling on the closures perceived the role of public education within the American system of federalism. This thesis finds that the school closures represented a conflict between a conservative and a progressive view of the Constitution. According to the governing case law at the time, it was permissible under the Constitution for a county to abandon all public education. In order to reopen the schools, the courts had to employ new and innovative interpretations of the law of the land. This thesis also shows that the county s defense of the closures was more dynamic than has previously been believed. The closures were not only defended by relying on traditional interpretations of the Constitution, but also utilized a procedural defense that was aimed at prolonging the closures. This strategy played an important role in keeping the county s public schools closed for such an extended time period. This aspect of the litigation and its effect on extending the time period the county was able to operate no public schools has not been previously noted. This survey of the legal defense of the Prince Edward school closures shows that the defense was more versatile than has previously been believed. The American system of federalism and the duel court system with state and federal courts were exploited in several ways to keep the county s public schools closed. In order to reopen the schools, new, and to some extent radical, interpretations of the Constitution had to be employed.
Call number
Date from 2014
Date to 2014
Geographic school Prince Edward County, VA
Size 1 thesis
Access restrictions yes/no n
Access restrictions
Part Of larger collection yes/no n
Larger collection title
URL Lagerquist, Jonathan
Repository University of Helsinki
Repository address Helsinki Finland
Repository contact name
Repository contact title
Repository contact email
Repository contact phone
DoveRegion (outside of Virginia)
Subjects o    African American students

o    African Americans–Civil rights

o    African Americans–Segregation

o    Public schools

o    Race relations

o    School children

o    School closings

o    School integration

o    School integration–Massive resistance movement

o    Segregation in education

o    Prince Edward County (Va.). County School Board–Trials, litigation, etc.

o    Public schools–Virginia–Richmond

o    Public schools–Virginia–Prince Edward County

Types Manuscript

Stan Shaw Collection 

Stan Shaw Collection 

Creator Stan Shaw
Description Stan Shaw was Chairman of the Student Help Project at Queens College from January 1963 through January 1964. The Student Help Project organized Queens College students to provide free tutoring services to schoolchildren in South Jamaica, Queens (circa 1962-1968) and in Prince Edward County, Virginia (summer of 1963). In South Jamaica the volunteers assisted children who were below grade level. In Prince Edward County they tutored African American children who had been denied formal schooling since 1959, when the County shut down their public schools rather than enforce court ordered desegregation. Queens College Education professors Dr. Rachel Weddington and Dr. Sidney Simon coordinated these initiatives with Shaw and other students. As a result of this collaboration, by the fall of 1963 over 220 students had participated in the South Jamaica project and 16 students had spent 6 weeks tutoring in Prince Edward County. The collection contains newspaper and magazine articles, reports, photographs, press releases, and a diary documenting the Student Help Project in New York and Virginia.
Call number
Date from 1963
Date to 1976
Geographic school Prince Edward County, VA
Size 1 linear foot
Access restrictions yes/no no
Access restrictions
Part Of larger collection yes/no
Larger collection title
URL
Repository Queens College (CUNY) Department of Special Collections and Archives
Repository address CUNY Benjamin Rosenthal Library RO317, 65-30 Kissena Boulevard, Queens, NY 11367-1597
Repository contact name Dr. Benjamin Alexander
Repository contact title
Repository contact email QC.Archives@qc.cuny.edu
Repository contact phone (718) 997-3650
DoveRegion (outside of Virginia)
Subjects o    African American students

o    School children

o    School closings

o    School integration–Massive resistance movement

o    Tutors and tutoring

o    Student Help Project

o    Shaw, Stan, 1943-

o    Queens College (New York, N.Y.)

Types o    Clippings

o    Diaries

o    Photographs

o    Press releases

o    Reports

A Chink in the armor : The Black-led struggle for school desegregation in Arlington, Virginia and the end of massive resistance 

A Chink in the armor : The Black-led struggle for school desegregation in Arlington, Virginia and the end of massive resistance 

Creator James McGrath Morris
Description First published in Journal of Policy History 13.3 (2001) 329-366
Call number
Date from 2001
Date to 2001
Geographic school Arlington County, VA
Size 1 book
Access restrictions yes/no
Access restrictions
Part Of larger collection yes/no
Larger collection title
URL
Repository OCLC World Cat/Old Dominion University
Repository address
Repository contact name
Repository contact title Worldcat.org
Repository contact email http://odu.worldcat.org/title/a-chink-in-the-armor-the-black-led-struggle-for-school-desegregation-in-arlington-virginia-and-the-end-of-massive-resistance/oclc/359503762&referer=brief_results
Repository contact phone
DoveRegion (outside of Virginia)
Subjects o    Arlington County (Va.). School Board

o    School integration–Virginia–Arlington County

o    Segregation in education

o    Segregation–Virginia–Arlington County

Types Book

The Struggle for Civil Rights in Staunton and Augusta County 

Creator Josie Dull, Augusta Historical Bulletin
Description This article from Augusta Historical Bulletin, which was submitted as senior thesis for the Adult Degree Program at Mary Baldwin College by Josie Dull explains how desegregation in Staunton, Virginia went more smoothly than other areas of the state and country, in that the black and white citizens of Staunton accepted the “inevitability of integration.” The main reason for the smooth transition, was the constant persistence of town citizens (both black and white),community leaders, church leaders and the Staunton branch NAACP of pointing out inequalities of the black and white schools to the Staunton School Board, as well as the pressure to appoint an African-American member to the school board.
Call number
Date from 2002
Date to 2002
Geographic school Staunton, VA; Augusta County, VA
Size 22 pages
Access restrictions yes/no no
Access restrictions
Part Of larger collection yes/no
Larger collection title
URL http://www.worldcat.org/title/augusta-historical-bulletin/oclc/7992273&referer=brief_results
Repository OCLC World Cat
Repository address http://www.worldcat.org/
Repository contact name
Repository contact title
Repository contact email
Repository contact phone
DoveRegion other
Subjects o    African American students

o    African Americans–Civil rights

o    African American–Segregation

o    High school students

o    Middle school students

o    Public schools

o    Race relations

o    School children

o    School integration

o    Segregation in education

o    Topeka (Kan.). Board of Education–Trials, litigation, etc.

o    Public schools–Virginia–Augusta County

o    Public schools–Virginia–Staunton

Types Narrative

Prince Edward Schools Experiment in Education 

Prince Edward Schools Experiment in Education 

Creator Jet Magazine
Description This brief article from the October 3, 1963 issue of Jet Magazine, explains about the newly reopened Prince Edward County’s free public schools “experiment in education.” The article states that: The school system will have an estimated 1,700 negro pupils and four whites, will have two elementary schools, an intermediate and a high school, but no grades. ‘Children will be grouped according to age, size, and mental ability’…’and will be given the opportunity to progress at their own speed.’
Call number
Date from 1963
Date to 1963
Geographic school Prince Edward County, VA
Size 1 article
Access restrictions yes/no no
Access restrictions
Part Of larger collection yes/no no
Larger collection title
URL http://www.worldcat.org/title/jet/oclc/34163826&referer=brief_results
Repository OCLC World Cat
Repository address http://www.worldcat.org/
Repository contact name
Repository contact title
Repository contact email
Repository contact phone
DoveRegion other
Subjects o    African American students

o    African Americans–Civil rights

o    African American–Segregation

o    High school students

o    Middle school students

o    Public schools

o    Race relations

o    School children

o    School closings

o    School integration

o    School integration–Massive resistance movement

o    Public schools–Virginia–Prince Edward County

o    African Americans–Education–Virginia–Prince Edward County

Types o    Press releases

o    Reports